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Full text of "The life of General Monk: late Duke of Albemarle; from an original manuscript of Thomas Skinner, ... To which is added a preface, ... and some observations ... by William Webster, ... 1723"

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Good of Your Couxrxr; 
That eaſy Addreſs and 
flowing Affability, that en- 
5 gaging Conde ſcenſion „ 8 

well as graceful Dignity in 
all Your Actions, have, my 
Loxd, in Your early Years, 


4 4 


given You ſuch a Share of 
the general Eſteem and Af, 
fections of Your Country: 

men, as very few have ever 
lived to attain to- Thoſe 
who have the Happineſs to 
live near You, feel no worſe 
Effects of the Man of Qua- 
lity, than his Bounty and 
Hoſpitality, and a Readi- 
neſs to protect them from 
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Pag. 269 Sed. 8 for Dr. Eldres, , read Wren. 
Pag. 271 for anſwer d r. Nr. Aria, * Com- 
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x a Diſaffes hen they pre 
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an not mean that. a bare 1 Boge, of 
honouring. *he Memory of Genera AL 

LONK,, ? ut to recommend b- 
very, Narrateue of his ſe. - To ape 
prove 4 Deſ⸗ n of that Nature to the 
Taſte of the. preſent Age, it muſt be well 
and happily | executed. And 1. da re Pre- 

ums 10 ſay; that- every) impartial 
Reader, allowing for ſome Vari tations 
in the. Phraſeolagy of our Bio, grapher 


from. the. modern, Diclion, will allo, 7 
wat he has. NG himſelf not only. as 


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K Ter Views ho 
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0 > ty aac — fades of, hin 
wehe "the. Notoriety eber 
kde m0 he dt \ 


mile Motives» in vbe 
4 articular — 1 11 
allowing any 2 10 him, as an 


„ entelligent 


1 
- MH thoſe very flrboradmate Perſons gh pho 
h ee the Creates of 
0 a nent „ n gemi y Alirecs- 
8 | * by binn + an \ enſile, and: ſo. Mas 


ib GEN EIA Il binfelfy. ho \ . 
. 10 ihe oer ng Hand of Gp, 


e 10 a Succa/e 2 very Pw 
aul and unexpected,. and that the I ig 
aum aud & e of + O P erſons who 
ited -inta\ the: Secrecy of bis 


1 Chee, though rhaſe wete. but, very 
1 feu, were / Uſe. to him; but I can ſee 


uo Reaſon for ſuppoſing. bim the Pro- 
Peri of his Afſihants, or merely paſſive 
_ to. an-arre/iſtible Direction f Provi- 
dence; any. more than I can agree in 
e with my Lord Clarendon, That 

W 4 it 


; as the — —— [ — of 
mein Er enen vo the Dir ecion of 


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give — Lientenancy of: Treland. MT 
er Place. he. ſays, The 
General promis d to reſtore the King 
vithout any Conditions at all; 4 


ing this extraoratn 'y, Reaſon fon t, 


that, he. was in Hopes by not articling 
to have the better Terms, Whereas .if 


be had really intended to capitulate rwith 


ay King, be could hardly have. ask 'd. an 


J? ling, ifs zbe Goun it elf, 07 
ANI. ſomething 


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g very prejuedicial to the Dig" 


75 of ö— cb 
have granted. Dx nta 
But the moſh poi lay "aid: 22 2 
Charge bie han been brought d 108233 * 
the GENBR hy is: that of Di /ſSrmula 
and Taſinceritys Aud, io aggravat? , 
nothing has been omirced "ces the cor; 
non Hlerer uP0; 


2 he had a ſecret Intention to bid 
in the King, * ite he was in the In- 
tereſt of the Common-wealt!; biz * 
then again, to "deprive | him 0 of the Se. 
dit: an Reward of fuch an Buemi, 
they: labour as mtluftriouſly 70 prove, | 
that he intended no ſuch thing. 
But though it may be thought a ſu 2 
| cient Anfwer to the Enemies of GEN 2 


es * there not yet be ſome 
WI. OY 


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| nat, Monx; that they are ſo comra- 8 
dictorq and inconſs, ſpent in their Chat "i : 


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| \ much 16 ided 1 ah. their 0 non more, 
ö I think, than they needed to hat been 
MM 13 in a Matter where the Evidence i is 0 
clean and Atrong. Sore aforibe the. CO- 

7 of h. al Purpoſes to the | 

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| Rac Fortunes of: b 
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rs cart! willing vn allow. Mr. 


card h iudefinizely, That his In- 
eunntions v9 ſettle che general Quiet of 


were very 1 and clear 


able t to. _ - cert 


ett er er inelimd to ſerve” the . 
King, than any Man in Power in the 


| three won pd but not to hade taken 


1 * or Reſolution 


Get efioing hin him , Fill about the Time 


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flowed the Nation, of Wa² ortilnatty 
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duct being diflinitly con pered, we may. 
collect Evidence enough ro prove in high. 
2 „ 85 5 probable at d, coe, 
F he di really proceed 
pon | Ra a an — EN e 
Ui Concurrence and E 


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muſh, ſuppaſe him ro have condutted him- | 

ſelß, upon'the Suppoſition of. his antend: 
ng uhr Reftoration,, that he really di a | 
inteud, ubat hie proſecuted, ſeeming 
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| it, is immoral, 6 of 12 . 
| Perſon was, © an] In e, &, 0 
| rood, where There 2240 4% Ve a | 


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. EDWARD ATR IAIN 
1 .. ES ” 
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ten is to be giuen, be. 


. v4 condutted hin/elf.: by, the. ſame 


political, Maxime which; ſome of the 
mo Eelebrate e | Heber Fd 2 ae * 


gc 


o*: "if we. may 


v judge. 


” 0 their At ions , the Tied 1 . — 
ancen. 100 e N een Ne | 
am __ at all e 7 - Ne | 

Ludlow, and oth: er hot) Republicans ; 
-pretipitated rom. a, Height" of Power 
and Greatneſs, and 8 exposd. #0. the jul 


2 gnation of am injur d Prince, of 6 
long abus and oppreſsd People, in 


cli d at any Nate 10 traduce thi. great 


altem, F their Ruin and Inſamy. 
Meither are we, to wonder, if we 

fil 7 nd Meu of r191d Republican Prin. 

ciples, equally tolent in rhein Eexpreſ- 


ft ions of Rage. and. Malice ag es the 


Hand which down A belroed 


len | 


+» SS DB. f DS 2Þ_ ag Foo im, 


— 


tre, , that rn 
ual be * e wih * nmon Senſe, 
| and not Aebt 10 rechen nend enges 
to 1 Feb U, f 
ſters, by Def nee of /f 
and Phaftjees; 45 are re lt erly NOI" 
of Mohatoe®; in gen 7 eneral. 


{ 


6 5 2 and State, the Reſtores 7 of our 
Meluut and Coil Liberties may, de- 


bred. L IIues, a favour- 
055 wn * what .; s. doubifal, 
the Fort gene of * What 2 is criminal; in bis 
Condune. py” N. 
Hou 05 Ws. 16 e of ine, a6 
fended © 


or Os a Review FT; 1s Hiſtory ; 
b 


x” however, 


i A 


4 King or hi, Mini- 
ach P rinciples Ta 


Bus from all true Engliſhmen, Fo 
the Friends of our happy. Conftiturion. in 


as 7 7 . 5 eſs, an Aacri ity, in cele- 


rom the. Charge: of. H. ypocrify 
and L Diſſimulation , will appear more di 


— eres 
OT” e — » ns Ee — * — 3 2 * 


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— OA at tes. oa, |! 


— — 2 
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Reftoratnn of the I 


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43 64 the Nation, f 5 Fiat xn _ 


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cafi on of 
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of Ds 


role of Honour; know ng 


The Er BIA“ 


a. be veſt of "his Behaviour, and . 
undeniuble Teſti 
ren don * confeſſes, That 


monie: M Lord Cla- 
"th 0 ghout 

jc Whole L > he Was ne er \ ſulpe&- 
ed of Diſſimulation Dr. W Skinner 
takes particular: Novice, "upuir 150 we 
s" gding"00-1ho' 


yr hy, that the Torn 
then Govermor of © Briſtol; too 
him to be 
a Perſon of Integrity, and that would 
not falſify his Word. Plaimeſi in 

his Dealing," a and u certain ufrantneſs 
in his Behaviour, were 2 muclb hir Pro- 
per Characler, rhur be oi among 
the Folders the vulgar; bur honourable 
Title sf Honeſt George. Aud it can- 


Hawley, 


not eſeape the Notice of the moſt negli 
Se ur _ rr 1 bee fe lt Car 


4 . . 4 — 


1 


Ae III. . P. 700. & n Sect. 8. 
wh * age 


8 this Pa- 


e 2 


P 


4 Auch F Per" Og” f "bis —.— 1 
ona fertled. 2 rinciple, 1b α wield; 


ne, in bis fallactous Conduct awards 
ile Common-wealth, though he did nat 
Views 10 male Declaratiom and Pro- 
| neprionants to. his real Sentiments 
: nh Intentions, be abſolutely: refusd e- 

ver to abjure the King, or Monarchy; 
ab. the Abjuration: Oarh: was tender d 
10 him as\\ a; Teft of his Affection; and 
when the Nefuſal of is much: endanger d 
not only. his."\{nereſt, his Commiſſion, 
and thereby his whole Scheme, but his 
Life too; an undeniable Argument, both 
14 bg ulla Regard: to the Sa- 
Je b 4 9 — 


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9 


the King and Mane: Di 'hecable 


—— — 
bY „„ 
1 


the + Rn oy 


xxiv The EpiT og“ 


credneſs of an Oath, and of his loyal In- 
en. ts does not aner — that 


- 186 valley kind Ale ar rere fer 


queſtions a 
an Author 5 anna it. 
A ſcurrilaus Writer, wethout. 4 Name, 
+ pretends 10 groe ur the Gopies of. 


ral Letters, wherem-the General. call 


e witneſs in ibe \famei\ ſolemn 
Alanner a is an ur rene. 


Mantersaf Hutz, PY Truthiof anbich ae- : 


pends:npon-therr hu eracuy. He 


does not tell us hu he cume y thoſe 
Letters, —— — how 


* „Wunder Bu + The Arts of eig, 
Te ſw 5 


„„ rern «) PP 


faber p, 1 
of - fallfys u this Jaoutdl Mering, 
pt Dogs" Whiebs. was: 2 60 


. 
isa charitheiGx una} aid 
wit ſeveral Lerters, e 
ſtream he Juto, and ufier awards 
10 the Army an Garri- 


— un that. 1% hoe * aid 
Afſemble dis yeal-Intentions; but that 
he did iv in a manner as ſolemm aud ſa- 
cred us un Qurb, and yet, in a Time of 
See Danger, bar he hond re- 
faſt an Qunb, 1s: wan Ln 


finrom;o waſh PRI EEE 


wr judge from ie Ghar adter 0 tha 


53 


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me —— ws 
8 wy P P 


vi The Es 1 70 on 8 


8 F Diſſh mulation} eue, has 
been —— articular 


& 
Flbves 0 falſify! the moſt: ſole. 
and Engagements to both. Ludlow in 


have been parties 


3 10 Sim — 0 Sinice- a 


rity, who repreſent: G RN RAL Moxx 
as a\Perſon wholly abandord," for do- 
parting ſometimes from-the-f 


1⁴⁶ Rule 
of them; though driuen to thut Neceſ- 
ft wy" by- their Rebellin aguinſl tbeir 
gand Country, did not ſeruple them- Ml 
#:Oaths 


particular had taken: the Covenant, 
which oblig d him, to declare far the 
King and Monarchy, and: at the ſame 


time was a: notorious Republican; and 


boaſred of ut as. the greateſt Glory of his 


_ Life, that he Was, one of the King's Jud. 
Ses. LE. <[ have « 


P. N E + 1 CE, xxvii 


Fo have argued hitherto «pon the Sup- 
Poſdbion, that GENERAL MoNK Was 


as 2 and eee Hebemeées, as 


MAN N. elicit 0 eee by 


tr; ot ave 47 eh TY But the 3 of 


E otherwiſe 70. thoſe who 
> | Fas the leſt Qppartunities of. knowmsg the 
Js 7:athiof in. Dr. Skinner * Jays very 
A juſtly t z M 1 WAS unluckily caſt a- 
1 mong thoſe People, rather by his ill 

chan any Choice of his o], but 
ſtill eſpecially careful to keep bim 
fol from their. greater Guilts. J/hich 
1ragreeable'to: what the GENERAL pro- 
feſsd" 15 He John Greenvil, That his 
Heart and Affections were always true; 
and tho he had been paſſive to foe 
of their Directions, yet he neither 
3 nor. EI act OE them in Ro 


8 6 * N 13 x i. Z A 
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nns * 8 N *Pag. 62. Sect. 9. 


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10 the Intereſt of his Majeſty; and he 
—— himelf therein id _ Ho 
wr and Fidelity. 
A Peace being . 4 the 
"MW een Rebels, very. diſhonour: 

WH be Engliſh Nation, and ſack; as "gave 
Encouragement 10 new. Rebellion i in 
' Ireland; the Earl of Leiceſter, wh 
uus nominated, N Fr 
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wry of the: Government of Dublin. 
_—_ on a — ation of Arms "with the 
recall the Ho glih 


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— —y——⸗ zx 2: 6 NB rt 


the Parliament againtt the Ning: A. 
mong the reft Was: GENERAL. Monx, Hit 
who, upon his Arrival at Briſtol, 3) 
Order from the Secretary of State, ua. 
| femmes ans Jen. to the. A 4. Ox- 1 
ford. 1 
This. 16 OY fob Grote of Ding e 
concerning GENERAL MON 1 
iy; which: my Lord * Clarendon, 005 
never was thought partial to his Chara- 
4er, aſeribes rather to the want of | 
Huterneſi in his» Diſcourſes againſt | 
© the Parkement, than to. any Inch» 1 
© nation tomardso them. Dr. Skinner 8 
f impmtes it 10 bis: being one of the 0 
Earl ef Leiceſter's cm Officers," in 
C particular Truſt and Confidence with 
* him” If I may be allow d'the Li. 
dem., Gade, in de Matter, _ 
ihe mae Reaſon of his Diſgrace — be. 


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94 


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4) 


an Ad of Parliamèni 


xXxxvi Ibe EDITOR“s 


bis The Succeſſes of the Parliament's 
Forces in England had: oblig'd the King 
to recal thoſe Forces from Ireland; which 


um à Hep, irregular in Hrrickurſi of 


Law, tho apprehended neceſſary" to his 
own Safety; be having before agreed 10 
whereby the Com- 
mons were empower d to proſecute that 
Mur, and himſelf oblig d not to make 


Neact ꝛithoui ibe Conſent of P arlia- 


Went.”” The Harl therefore being nomi- 
nated io ibe Litmtenancy' * Abe imme. 
diate. Authority of the 


was natural enough for ths Lira zo Nh 


the Earl and his 2 Cers © night fell 
look upon themſelves as theiServants of 


2 Parliament, oO ar _ the re 


he — 5 en, 06. Monks 
+ att — oh King at Oxford, 
Bis: AM. 2% Was 75 ue ſatis} ed, 


that 


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where he continued till the Conclaſien of 


Er LONG 
* . 5 Zo 


A 126 j cral Ack 
Cheſhite. af — 3 


Lord Clarendon is miſtalen; for: he 


repreſents Him as going thither only in 


| Quality of a Volun teer, nis K * 


gi nent having been diſpos d of. 
In thys — M Was: taken. Pris 
| nan „and commitied tothe Tower; 


the Man etzucem the Ring and Parlia- 


nent, aeuwithſtendng the. great H. ard- 7 


hips: Me/wferd in his l 7. ri/onment; 
and tht i dirt Mert frum the 
Parliament, of he would.engage in their. 
Canſe. dye; Lord Clarendon' 50 Ze 1 
meme this. Caſe is very honousallle to 
n, He mas no ſooner. in the Tower, 
6. thay the" Lord Liſle. who. had great 


0 rale fe him, aue Intereſt 


— \ ” % 
= LS Che »% 
. 


* 
* 


# Vol. III. p. 700. 


KEE 


P 
2 „ - SW arw#' no 7 


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xxxviii The EpIfTGR's 
4 in ile Parliament, with much Im. 


FTP 


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FFP 


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e; Penn, — he thous 
&« neglefed, that there Was 60 Care 
© talen for his Exchange, nor Money 

4 font for bis Support. Does who 
agree with the ſame noble Hi- 
 frieaws Opinion in another Place, of 
which'1 have already taken notice, that 


CES” Js 
n 


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1 
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he contracted an Inclination to a 
Common- wealth during his Reſidence 
in Holland; "or rather 7s" 1. not an un. 


LS I ICE BN 7 . #5 1 td - F , " 4 
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* hos 
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| | lament” in Oppoſir: 


© CE XXXIX 
When the War was at an End, ond 
the King himſelf a Prifoner, the whole 


| Power of the" Nation in the Hamdi of 


the Parliament, and ue Laie, of 


ord /Lifle prevaild pos 


| him tb ſerve in Ireland ; a War mn 


which he had been enga _ before, and 


which was wee, to 2 Principles, 


the Iriſh being declared Enemies 10 Eng- 
land, and 10 the King, as well as 10 
the Parliament : S that by this Expe- 0 


dition he did not properly ſerve the Par- 
tion to the King, but 


properly the Natzon i m Oppoſition 
to the common Enemies of it; and hy 
Cm on from the P nen 1 

mproered by a publick A of the 


Le 2 ba Gren ons for 


that Purpoſe. eh 


HY for was the Grxtiat From le. 


ing conſcions of any Diſſervice zo the 


© EM — _ 


1 7 
3 _ 


Al The E D 1 Tt Ns | 
Kin g from bis. Accepia ce of (that Com. 
miſſion, that beſides his Declaration 10 
the Biſhop. of Ely,. then. in the. Tower, 
be told the Parliament it ſelf; That be 
Was going to fight againſt the 17 
Rebels, bur not againſt the King, 
whom he was reſolv'd W to op- 
'pole : Whence it appears, that.a poſi- 
| ide Reſerve of his —— an ex- 
preſs Condition. of his atcepting the Com- 
miſlion, and that the Parliament com- 
plyd with, 7 7 This FEIRAVRADIE' AC | 7 
we meet. with 3 in the Life of Dr. a. | : bs 
wick, with. relatium 10 tb Grounds of 
that. good Mans Confidence i in the. G k- 
NERAL'S Loyalty, from zu hat fe had 5 
5 often heard the. Biſhop of. Ely relate, » | 
the Foundation. of the. fame. (C den: f 
his Lordſhip. had 4 #44 him %%: 

cc That that great Man, Hart RIS "es 
, formerly — Priſoner. when Hag 
cc ng with. fra, Bravery. »for the 


& King, | 


J 9 . n 5 n 8 
5 22 /Z ITY ES EE ENOTES ag TE 
A : ; [ 8 0 


14 fer'd hu. armen 


PRE H 'E; xli 
* ; Fi, # £$* Fs 


WO: and that in no mean Poſt, and 
ec after a lang and ſevere Confinement 
« in the Tower, wah. hus Lordſhip, 710 
« Hopes, teſt of. recovering his Liberty, 
cc. : (the K gs. Cauſe growing daily more 
cc  deſpexate -) when Cromwel, who kyew 
_ - bis Courage, and Experience in Mili- 
lar) Malts, had lange courted him to 
come oden ta his Side, bo ond. at 4 0 of- 


[4 


W << 57 nice; 10 Kann big Liberty 7 
IS fir: 


UF A 54 


| Ma pn ali 5 — that. he would | 


« bear. Arms: againſi the Iriſh Rebels, 
« but; by; wo , means againſt, his King; 
L © aud when, all M. arters were agreed, 


7 * and: be Was going 70 take leave of his 
f 0 « Friend, he came t this Biſhop, « and 


. + 1 himſelf. af his Feet, beg gd 
the uenegalle Prelate's Benediclion; 
te bindin 9 himſelf at the Same time _ 


| - © this ' ſolemn Engagement, _ he 


* Heuer _ 


© cum venerando Epiſcopo dm mace: 


* Cromwello, qui hominis fortitudi- 


Xlii The Evitrors | 
ve: never would | und an „ Enemy to me 


Ing. 
5 5 * Nempe cum in Bello clin cap 
* tus fuiſſet vir in paucis inſignis Regi 
fortiſſimè dimicans, & ſqualore' vin- 


« culorum in Arce Londinenſi, Juxta 


OY 
* 


© ratus fuiſſer, nec ulla ſpes Libertatis 
ct recuperandæ, (rebus Regiis indie 


\ 


te labentibus) i iph affulgeret; diu 3 


OY nem, & rei Militaris' peritiam probe 
ee noverat, in ſuas partes ſolicitatus i 
ce eſt; candemque ut Libertate fu u- 
e nã cum præfecturũ in Bello Hiber- 
e nico frueretur perſuaſus, contra Re- 


e belles Hiburnicos, minimè © verd 
ie contra Regem faren; ſe atmarurum 
3 Campe, jam acceptis 


* Aer tals valeaicturus eſſet 


„ 


Out 


* 3 * 


ö W of 


5 N. e =D 
dg 


| F P 8 E a 40 K. 1 xli 1 5 
. ad hune *: Bpiſcopum acceſſit, ad 
b c cujus pedes provolutus, veneraudt 
patris benedictionem petit, hæc 
WU ſane in ſe recipiens, Regs ſao ſe 
TW hoſtem nanquam futurum. 
4 remarkable Teftimony of * genes 
f 70us and open Dealing with the Parlia- 
Wen, and of hip auen Fideliry 10 
Whe King, 
1 ee ho W, iter of that Life N3 
Aeris it ar a Fall mot undbubred, 
iat the Gangs neber fought ei. 
tber in Ireland, or Scotland for his 
Deliverers in En gland, Sur employed 
all bis Force against. thaſs who had 
formerly erbated the Rin ing all ibis 
Frouble and Diſturbance.” Hoc au- 
tem certiſſimum eſt, Virum illuſtriſ- 
fſimum Liberatoribus ſuis in Anglia 
* NY ilicafſe, vel in Ebern, | 


l 2 2 ny " 
| — 


8 
— OS 


„ © vel 


n { PP in Scotia; . contra 3 ea 
quæ has T 80 þ egi olim concits- 
ic verant omnem eve impenden 


*. 


Ard > I conceive wa addy F Wm Nes 


1 


p Son 


zo any Employment in the Civil Wars 
at home, where he muſt. ungvoidably 


-Tmereſi, contrary 70 bis v edfe 


| ther can it remain any Janger"'a. One: 


| | GE. ap particular 'Deſs Fe, and Regue), 


fem an Employment hf! 

F bd, that-of bene 14% England; 
4 * the” Dr. Skinner coul nut Bale) 

determine” this Qneſtion. Ys 


YE OE 1 


; : 
1 ; 


Ga Pag 342. Sect. 15 ef 
4 oe es 


fon of the GEXERA Hs bring: fo aver]: 


P : 7 SHES. A Ch : Y 
7 oa i Oe TB Ss Tb CT Sn” ns . 


88 S 


and diretily have oppos d his Majey: 
e e. 
ſolution 7 and ohen Declaration. Voi 1 ; 


[ | | vn whether, his being epeploy <4 after- 1 
i words againſt the Scots, ,t Ot hi 


1 e ar whether. his S Vor tau 1% fa, 
1 th re his „ 4. 10 Heſee fin : 
nuch d. 


pPEEF ACA xl 
2 further E idence that GENERAL 4 
Wi ox x chaſe, for his Provinces, the re- | 
Vier Places of Ireland and Scotland, 

2 judging them 10 be equally the Rue? =} 
Bis, both of tbe King and Parliament, = 
| we find King, CHARLES. II. -correſpond-' Al 
0 mg unth the 6) ENER'AL,. and direffins 

| im to thoſe very Meaſures he: pubſued” 
n relation to his ſerving in Scotland, 
: hee the: King thought him moſt ca- 
alle of doing bim effettual Service. 
Aer I bad wrote this, his Grace 
8 . Dake of Albemarle, did 
ne ibe Honour to ſhew'\me a Leiter 
Witten b abe King all in bit % 
: . Hand, to his Graces Father com- 
WO 1219mg in Scotland, ar leafs four 
© / carsbeforethe Reſtoration ; in which” 
: "rs, Majeſty -earneftly. addisd him 
0 fals particular Care not to ſuffer 
. 5 e, 55 * —_ ce KA Crom- 


pat Life of Dr. Z Barwick, p. 186. 


vel 5 


"Re 3x "TIES +004 
—— 


— Y 0 & £ N ns wth 
r — 6 » 1 8 
Dy . —— I . . c V< 


- « 8 _ 4 1 K 
* — $I = -<* a ar awe 
— 2 en 14 
* v 
r " . 
. ˙ SO NET . . 
ws * 
W—W— —ñ̃ — — er nat es a . 
— —— 2 — bo 


PR 


— 


2. 101 


cc 


© to have wrote no Anfever to it, think 


"os 


© rous Conjuntture by all means fofer. » 


cc 


DNN * 2 b 2 — C EY — 
r r ———— ů Wort Wop rc — — 4 _ 
* % wo ls - 2 2 
* . 


ar 
„„ 


xlvi 
« wel's,: 10 be draws 048 of. Scotland 
i re him in other things to the Di. 
(ie of his own Judgment, not in 


cc 
cc 


cc 


c Obedience, when Opportunity ſhould 


cc 


cc 


cc 


cc 


cc 


cc 


TE” 


« 1 _ Wd deg ſuum 


this profound and perpetual Silence, 


=” Feng haw fariplcram; il 
item Princeps Chriſtophons i 


err © — 8 * nn * * ” 9 
* - 6 ee = 1 6 
nn area 
. . 


The Eneror 8 


8 n 


. 
2 3 TTT S YO IIS W=; 


the leaſl whtful of his Fidelity and 


offer. This Letter he preferv'd among 
his maſt valuable Tre fares yer ſeem; 


mg it much beiter, and in that day 2 : 


anſwer by. ſome Heraich Undertaking, E 
than by hare empty Words; yet fn I 


thoſe Dombts I have mention d abort, f 
0 f bout all. © $a N. had fler 4 


rhz oftendere mihi Li- 


00 Sereniſſimo 


e 


. be 


* 
E 


« nuit, ut Vir illuſtriſimus id unicè 
« curaret, ne ſe Cromwelli Artibus e E 


< 


U . F 5 8 . E 
N 3 c 
a, 


c opportunitate, præſtando minime 
« dubius. Has ille Literas inter * 
„ ctiſſima Kehα⁰i Sul repoſuit; ſcribe 
tamen nibil reſcripſiſſe viſus eld; 


4 


0 


5 1 : 

ö «. 
11 

* 4 


uo facinore, quam nu» 


0 


928 


* nitate, dubia illa, de quibus ſupra 
“ diximus, procul omni ade ortum 
ol bn. 

rum the: Tauer a Fe F bi 
Lover there is ub rooms 10 doubt, but 


a fe, 
7M 


in che . ; Pad hh, W 


e manu exaratas; in quibus ſerid mo- 


Scotia divelli pateretur; cætera de 
« ejus fide atque obſequio, qua data 


omnino ſatius, * iſto Rerum 
diſcrimine omnino tutius exiſtimans, 


« dis & * verbis reſpondere. Ex 
hac tamen alta & perpetua tacitur- 


il Was themery;famerwhich it puh], 


1 N LO rag 


Prone Kei . 


a — ——̃ —— wh we oe 


Editor by Sir Hans Sloan, and had been 


ee! ne ö od | f gyih 


e for that Opportunity, which may be 
= , mage ſooner than we expett- When 


« ©'the mean Time have à care to ket) 


* know the Hurt b can do them in 


Ne. . J. as ie was b ure! 1 to the 


tranſcrib d by him from” 2he 6 Original in 
the Duke of Al en arler Cabinet, 3 


* 
bee s we SK . 


JJ ͤ ͤ ͤK V OT TR 


Ce len, 11 Aug. 1655 


v E who believes he lriows your 
CF Nature and Int linutions w- 
cc ry well aſſures me, rar ' motewit)- 
* fanding all ill Ktan and. My 
— retam FPALY yorr old A 
efolve to exprif 

«7; upon he fabial. Opportunity 
© which is as much as I book for from 
© Yor. We muſt all | patiently wait 


it is, let it find you ready; and in 


© your ſelf out of their: Hands, whi 


1 


466 good 


J A > 1 gn Ort” 


OE 


1 


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in Ireland in 1649, 
all: Emp ment till 1650, 
when vo Seots enter d into à Treaty 
with King CHARLES II. for n 
. His * 2 ; Scotland. 4 2 


r romwel 4. 


A * 


acce pied a Crna 


2 
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at yy Hi 
the Scots, Me. 


ata 


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note: before, Th 


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GENE FO ö ONK K \ had 1 50 Bes : 
| fon to Cuche, 7 
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* Pag 375. Val III. 


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lit 

© Soldiers, who had . A Engage- 
ee nent of Duke Hamilton, or who gave 
cc the leaſt Occaſio an o be, fu uſpetted 10 
ce wiſh well to the King, to be recerod 
te ino their Service.” _ And a0 hen they 
were zotally de) feated by | Gro mwel, the 
noble Hiſtorian * "afſures us, the King 


thought : it Matter of Triumf and the 
greateſt Happineſs, that could, befal 
him, in that he had thereby loſt ſo 


great a Body of his Enemies de if 
they. had prevaitd” would { have ſhut 
him up in Priſon. In ſhort, it was 
an Army neither raisd nor govern? d by 
the King: They were not Properly his 
Subjeds, but he rather ſubjef to them 
being oblig d to receive, inflead of Lov 
ing the Power to give Tante. Tube Ke. 
foration they chiefly aimd at was, that 
of bein 55 Dominion, the Ney 


2 20:8 Ms Eee A tn TN nf rg EE ere CI. „ 3 


m 


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s ; EE ERS He: WOES Yeats EE ATE 23 4 3 


— 3 
8 


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5 Pa a - 7 6 
7 _ * k * * 
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* 4 mn 


—_— 


— 4 


Cauſc 


Mt | 
Cauſe wah 5 the Pretence, as u being 
a preh. G Means Jubſervient | 70 it. 

In what Light b this Matter will opprar : 
is the Reader, I know not; o'me it: 
ſeems very "clear, that "the Vols would T1 
not have ref ord the King upon fuch 1 
Conditzons as were conſiſtent with the 4 
Dignity. and Prerogatrve of the Crown, _ | | 
and the Rights and Liberties of the 2 | 
ple; and 5 the Government could not {1 
have been ſettled upon any laſting Fun- 1 
dation by a foreign Force, much Iefs by. — © 
a Nation ſo. obnoxious. 10 the Engliſh, 
and ſo devoted to "their 6 on particular 


8 ES K 75 


115 


pr, * mn 
* k 


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Nene 


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5 1 4 


& 
*0 1% £1 
2 

9 


Nor (= OR I EEO ge, 2 "ps A ERR CRE REED IIEID ERIE on on 


7 : 


Inereſts, as the Scots were ar that, 
Time.” © 1 4 

The P. amen Baving 17 N re-. 
dued Scotland, reſold upon an AF of 
Coalition, „ for uniting, both K. ingdoms 
imo one. Common-wealth ; GENE RAL. 
Moxk was. one of the Commiſſio oners. 


a down 20 Scotland 70 negotiate this 


_—_ XA. Buſineſs 


555 
wy 5 
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nodes.” LY De 1 5 
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Dr 


3232 


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5 » 


i £0 OA Pots: ne tA AR OL 2nd (s 


95 


10 ee ne Mo 
ray b; 
io 12 e 3 
any good Tuchinagions rowards 22 1 5 2 
or Kingly Government, he ſhould be 


* 


* * 
4 


8 


concern 'd in % WIC ted 0 4 e 1 


I 16 very a; 22 41 at thes. D#tance 
of Time, , and. hon an imperfett . Know: 


ledge of Circumſtances „ % 5 4; 
ment of. all the Motives | and 


every Part of his Conduct. The 


gency and Neceſſi ty of certain RG? 
Conjunttures might oblige him to ſome 


Meaſures, which, for wan of. knowing 
the. rut tuation things were then 7 in, 
ds now carry the Appearante, of. quite 
aifferent Purpoſes, than thoſe whereby 


be really governed himſelf. This, hows 
ever, we. 525 u with ſJome Certain: 


77 


= * 8 + 


Juag- 
Reaſons 
upon” which the GExERAL ated 4 


STEIN COT Wy 8 


323 ES he nn bg oe 8 Oe es NL 


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* . * 


Bui, ber all, we muſs. vor argue fþ 


of ar ſerving him, we. ought zo conclude 
in Favour of his good and general In- 


1 d 4 dentions, 


wy Ae * r * vo rr 4 u—w . PRI © * » * WW {22% 18> " „re. — ay *< 27 — - — 


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WOE i A PE OE NRF Sa 


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N 1 995 87% 82 She. 1907 IIS 4. <0 

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* 2 
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—vyꝛͤ— a——E' — 2 


gon ww 1 rern. Wt 
could really So affign'd) to the comrary. 


pogd thoſe N 


(if fuch 


In 165 5, upon another Iufurrectim 


in Scotland, GENERAL Mork went 


thither agam, and: ma w_ Time com- 
arhances. My Obſerva- 
nr 


non into that 


tioms upon on tbe 


Kingdom, will ſufficiently obviate any. 


In N which me? * enen yeu 


hence. + 


From this 7 * 10 bud Meſage fol 


hs KING to the GENERAL by Mr. 
Monk, zhere is Intle which: requires a. 


ny Animadverſions ; only to wipe off an 
Imputation of Cruelty during bis Admi- 
uiſtration in Scotland. My Lord Claren- 


don terms it a Rod of Iron, and a 


Voke very grievous to the whole Na- 


tion; ; an eee t. _ __ 


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1 en 1 * WRITE Wy 
Buy how | ſhall we reconcile 
theſe — ations to what h fays in 
another * Place, That he (Guexen'ai 
Moxx) © had exercis d no other Power 
(c.. over them than was eh neveſs 
« ſary 10 reduce that Peop | 


| « tire Obedience; and that in all 5 
| «, other Carriage towards them be w 


« friendly and compaſſionable ; nt as 
« be was feared by the Nobility, "ani 
i. ere by #he Clergy, „ fo he was not 
d by the common People, 

—_ receibd more Juſtice, and left. 
« Oppreſſion from him, than they had 
« Paper ae to: under | their own 
© Lords.” Dr. Skinner's Account of 
this Matter will be ſeen at Page 45. 
Seftion 19. and more ar large at 4, 7, 
and 8 Settions of Chapter VII. with 
whom Dr. nm e N 


e 
““ kh Rad, 
ISS td 6 


. 


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under” thoſe Difficulties found 
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. IOW 


ſerves, ES my Acciunr: is "fin weir) 
being taken notice of by no other Writer 


mee; which Circumſtance a- 
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us conſider what her E-. 
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from another Room, hears the Particu- 
Lars of en under Conſide- 


kf 3. 


ration. 
warmly intereſted ; in this Matter, they 
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_—_ oe r nor 


rity of the Lady. 


= in Ludlow's Memoirs, relating 
'CHaRtEs I. bis Reception of the New; 


Kin g was pleasd with it. 
| ni 10 be PR ar that Time! 


ral Tenderneſes and Compaſſion, and 


verſe to Hals of Cruehy, could occaſin i 
fo wide a Miſconftruciian of his Bela. 


rhey argue more, chisn pars hy Aube 


s Information. In an. 


ford to this, I ſhall only cus a:Paſſage 
ing to King 


of rhe — in Ireland. I have it 
good Hands, that the 
did thefe good? Hands found this how : 

, but the King's Look | 


Calunmy 1 


and Babe: obſerved. by i 


ed, bat he - 
Ji amn ed 1 impious and in- 
human a Plea re: If then the Ho i 
rred of am Nag or Perſons tw i 
wards Ma 7 Printe, -whoſe nau: 


whoſe habitual Piety render d him ſo « | 


ho 


Lu, 


je aber & Paſin, or Prep: fel 


2 en e L Mons Looks a 


mmmedrately \after the Refuſal of tbe 
W Government: from the Parliament. Bin 
1 whether it was before « or __ ( — 


. al); 11 was prior 10 Hir John Greens 


vis Application id the GENERAL 
N 


* 


EN ERA firſt own d hi Des 
FT gt of. reftoring the King, ſaving what 
| be told Dr. Price privately at Cold- 


Abele thas #be GEN ERAL had groen 
2 er 


k 1 * 4b 


until, in the Gu 1. 


7 * 
* * e * . 
4 * : 5 * 3 
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A , * * * : 
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© 


33 — 


* 
—— 


n ot e, . Ar. 'Echard — # 


ſtream. Now this Account of Mr. Lock 


warp wi —— — 2 — 
9 9 9 


96 
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ty 


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Vis net ſo nnd fo bim, , fo 

ah lorely oe #6" ble zieren, bug 
— Pap of his Of 
Fs , if He Rad taketr fi ue” a 
1 — much leſs was it his De- 
W lign to © fr an Army to an implicit 
4 Obedience to Whatever Reſolution he 
RE. f3 5108 ſhould 


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Z | Reſtoration. 
Regulations in the Ariny become, as un. 
doubtedly they were, the avow/d Grounk 


came they neut 


2 
oy oo ed wrers avian rere ee 


Erro“ 8 


ſhould chink fit to take, as my Lord 


Clarendon - * repreſents ir, bus 10 « 
Cormpliance with his Meaſures for the 
Otherwiſe how could hi 


of their Jealouſy concerning hini? Hig 
er to. entertary the leaf 
Imagination of his having 4 Deſign 1 


ſet up bimſelf, but only from che Ten. 


per and Inclinations of his Aru 
— knew ta be towards another Per- 
fon? Before be began his March frm 


Scotland, the Scots, who, from thei 
Efteem and Lope for him, were th 


moſt likefy to ſerue him in ſuch @ De 
en, offered to raiſe, and maintain at 


Boer yo Hg, Seven heard fa 


e Po mak he ** 70 de- 
ept, the ob he was going with leſs than 
fix thouſand againſ# Lambert, whoſe 
Army conſiſted of twelve thouſand, The 
Reaſon of his refuſing this ſeaſonable 
H ogy — fo neceſſary to 
by own. Safety, and and the. Ende of bis 
Anbuion, if he had any ſuch in View, 
aan be. reſolved. into nothing, but "4 
extreme Caution, leſt he ſhould give oc- 
caſion to ſuſpect, that be had any De- 

er of employing a foreign Aſſiſtance, 
mann he might enſlave the Nation, 
ely mcon/ifrent with the 


= and is abſolut 

1 2 5 and Waun 70 4 7 

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| prom = 5 Matter: „ 3 | 

| polnical Reaſons the GENERAL might 

| have a deliberating, as Mr. Echard 
© £4 


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Covenant, 20 qualify himſelj 
Juſt C omiſſion under the 


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Carringe toward. that' People, ee 
ally in Scotland, wheye they bod whoſe 
Power, ame ber) the" be Opporiit- 
"iy of Het 


as alſo. their. avow Hatred wank 


Y parricular Notice of, in a Paſſage 4. 
ready cited in this Prefact} xs 4 Wit 
neſs that they did nos effetih fm v 
Friend" eber 10 thei der er wer 


Pen „ i JV : *s 2 2 ALY N 


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fs. of 4 Man's Sent- 
GrxER AL as arguing 


L Ro agree: — — 
„ with. a. Common-wealth 
of Orders 


haps be 


with PW. ubordiwation i m the other ; ; nor 
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fe agreeable ro Scripture and 
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= the be Friend 


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4 Wan 3 dieb 4 is i true 2 
: fon of res ople Diftike of 4 4. How 
73 other, an how 3 i 1% that 
W cirher of them ſhould long ſubſift, ſepa- 
W -cly, in England, woe learn unhap- 
5% from the Fate of CHARLES I. 
1 Like Saul and Fonathan, they were 
lovely in their Lives, and in ate 
1 Dearhs they were not divided. 
I fhall detain the Reader n | 
than while T'\grve him a ſhort Account 
- the 5 from en * . 


tl the fob. — 7 _ — 4 ahe 
p ublick, That. 1 Foe not alter d the 
A Here, or Expreſſion in any one In- „ 
fance throughout the Hliſtory; except (| 
ar I have in ſome few Places, added 1 
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was trauſcri ty. the. Author c 
Dicdtiuu, far be Nreſi, lecault it bas 
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eee, fenen in which 

Argen ie bon 1120 Ia 2115 23 


bao the certainly nnbant mh Macs 
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he Goverume 7 of that City. VI. 
W. The Juen. 2 of the Scots into Engl: 
WO VII. #bich cauſed a Ceſſation with ; 
ui Rebels, aud obliged the King to re- 
a thy Engliſh Army to his Aare 
VIII Colonel Monk returns with them, 


but is. ſuſpected, as being the Earl of Lei- 


* 


ment; and, upon that Suſpicion, ordered 
#0 be. ſecured. at Briſtol : Lord Hawley, 
Governor of that Place, permits him to 
ge un his Parole to the King at Oxford, 
_ to: whom he is introduced by Lord Digby. 
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@ | Army, 


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he Farl of Strafford, 8 


noved the King, inſtead of treating further 
give him Leave 
+ 


1th. ſuch inſolent Rebels, 't 
” 10 charge them: Lieutenant Colonel LH 
as one of thoſe few that earneſtly. urged a 
erte, and gave very good Reaſons for the 
eccurity of the Event: And was many times 
erwards heard to diſcourſe it with a parti-. 
dignation, that ſo brave a Force of 
= arſe - Foot, able to have reduced a bet- 
er Army than the Covenanters could raiſe, 
ad another Kind of Kingdom than Scotland, 
ould be ſo baſely betrayed and baffled by 
Fs who had their Influence upon, rene 
es the Colnſels/of the late muß , 


4 & {ep 2 of? 15 EY 3% 818 155 r Nh oe 187 I. 
x. 2 es. * Y —_ # V7 4+ 4 


n. dur this War en ing at laſt in a Trea- 1640 
2 | a 


* 


N 
* 
* 
| 
* 


\ 4g, . ue n aus Ep 
3 


of - — a3 Fe 
0 


. ere rt A AA ers. bone p * 
4 — = 


—_ — ND ere "A 


by their Barth in ig ind; Abe gre 
thereof gave new Encour eme 
thes long deſign 4 Rqhellion in _— Py 
164% buaght's ant, eee 5 was the 


; 54% * 4 Fe $ © 4 wo 


wk To | _— 11 


— — Pa fi Re e up 
on as a fit Perſon: to ſucceed in the Licute- 
nancy of that Kingdom, after the Death of 
the late Earl of Straffurd. And Forces allo 
were votedro ere dee fo: the War, 
a 18% i: Pts SOOT eg oP 3K 14 
* = yrs this ETVICE \Lilngozac. 'Colond 
Man was appointed by the Earl of Leice 
er to be Colonel of his own Regiracnt, 
which, with the other Forces, was not ſent 
into Ireland ſor ſome while after. All thoſe 


* 


Nl 


Sapplieg being much retarded, through thoſe 
e which thts ** to ariſe between 
the 


Td 


CD we CD 


. 


the Kin 
lament:? 


K An and 60201 Par- 
80 der much of the Money rais\ 
ary ing on 1 Wer . ene W 


the Fun vf Eher. e the eee 
Forces — yer. 


IE kate of the Karl er 
Srraffos: Condirio of the Lui 
Affairs; Which the Wir in England chen in 
proſpect, was like to make worſe. The Eatl 
of e was in the interim appointed by 
him Lieutenant General of the En gliſh arm 
in bis Abſence, and bis Comrmiſſion was all 
tene rhe Kin. Wh 

| rein mia 3:17 6 e 

v. A6 bytes this Rebellion 

05 * Advanced before the March of: the 
olonel Monk did very good 
"ANC in: Inſomuch 
e Lords Juſtice rhbught him to we tony 
Mat to be Governor of that City 


Of”: SAO EIN he n, ct ue fo 


ä * 
* n : 4 p 
8 N TL TO Sg 5 bY Y 8 F - 1. 1 8 
7299 Als QT 116 9913 N 32 in 
5 * 8 . 
* 
* 0 * 


"is 8 Colonel Mont, 250 pry 


} 


ann 


” oe 4 


—— pe eros 


n 


* 4 Þ 
— —— — „„ e 
* . 


W 
cnn £77 


. 


r 


C r OE Gre 14), 73-4, 


1 e LIFE of) 
carrying on the War againſt the Rebels there, 
the Civil War in England: between the King 
and Parliament began, and bad ſo far pre- 
vailed with ſome Advantage on the Kings 
Side, that the Parliament began to think of 
calling in the Aid of the Horse, who, ſome 
While after, very (readily truſs'd up their 
Trinke Sand Covenant: and in Shoals came 
matching into England, zealous for their 
1643 Corman Caule nd FPRINGEr;- To balance i n 
ſome Meaſure this foreign Aid from Scotland, 
his Majeſty was — by the Counſel of 
Neceſſity, to aſſent to a Ceſſation with the 
Iriſh Rebels, and recall the Engliſh Army 
1 his own Aſſiſtance at home, ſome whereot 
landed at Veſt: of wen amen at wn th 


3 
; . N 1 1 13 5 
yi hy , | IR T 31 12 „ 


* 3.4 T5) 8-9 1 
vn. Wren cheſe Officers. and Regiment: 

Colonel Monk, according to his Duty, return. 
.et alſo into England. But at the Return of 
theſe Regiments the more loyal Party in the 
— had ſome Diſtruſt of the Earls Of. 
ficers, and particularly of Colonel Mon, be. 
ing his own Colonel, ſo that it was ſuſpected 
at his Return into England, he would ra. 
ther ſerve the Parliament than the King. At 
0 hin Arrival n nk what there . 
Fw ers 


2 


concerning him,; hang he — di Aim. to 
N the L odging 


2 who Was dee Gove nor of f re co, 
on 'his en, 1 20 


Colonel Monk with the Order he had receiv . | 
Colonel Monk ecpreſented to him the unjuſt 


Hin: that hen was return'd into England art 1 


8 


no other Reſolution but to as his M 


3 45 qt {5 4 * 5 PE 3 Oh, '2 2 a * 1 1 8 * f ie SE 


VIII. Tur 1 Land Hawley was 4 well ac. 
ec with Colonel Mou, that he knew 
nim to be a Perſon not only of C urage, but 
of Integrity and Honeſty, and that would 


not falſify his Word: So that inſtead of ſecu- 


ring bim at Briſtol, his Lordſhip tooks his 
Parole to geo directly to the King at Oxford, 
and ſent Le ters b 


ters by him to the Lord Digi, 
Y of State; who was ſo well farisfy'd 


See 


18 11 "2" A 3 2 


— 


* ii 2 44 10 N 


* b cis "ime: — Monk, through 
| | in the Nerherlandis War, | 


id his Action upon the Scu¹ν, and now of 
Tre = $4 late 


\ 


- 


; * 14. „ 2 7 ' ; , 3 8 * 
6 3 ale r ae,, 87 $4) bg AA L 


4 
* 


——— 


W * 
bes and 


de & nn + ** — 

8 — — — — 

2 W l — umme 

ry Be COBRA n "AA Jeu 
oy in IRA RN Ibo eee ee LEN \ 


e 7 SS oe eee ewes woe —— — 


he 


41 FE 


hg RR: WH ara" Ws nant, £4. 15 If: 0225 

„NC ent in his dot Stay at 
bee had, quickly oblered the. onde 
Army therc« that they were 
"ry ourage andi Bravety chongh,; but 
Diſcipline was — — remiſs; than he 

bad obſerved. in | KP Armies n There. 


che only "Way. 9 bis 
9 — wen 0 equal 


chan, — — there was 
much Reaſon and. Trach 48: whay-Golond 


be * Lis 1 wee mas gh 
tr ſhim wich. «© omm be 


| lief Sit Tbomar Ea 15 AR, 
rage and Experience, was certainly tl 


Man at Arms in the Parliament: Service, 


made ſuch kate got (ot, :Torkfhirey" us he 
wholly: ſurpriz; 'Irih Brigades: raiſed 
the Siege, .and; — other Officers took 
Colonel Mon Priſoner, and for the preſent 
-Gnred ban: in Hull. The Value of ehis Per- 
foo could no more be -conceal'd -ftrom-the 
Parliament We * been ne ing 


1 x00 late Actions to be pre- 
3 ee eee 7 


Ham 85 JN 


ahroad, and made their Maſters 
| * that Colonel Monk was i Man 
- worthothe) making. The Parliament there- 
| Fedor 19-28 vat Ape gy Ex- 

change him) commanded hi: va 
Hull, me ſecured — Tower of! Lon- 
Aon. Xl. AND 


e 2 — Rebels 


; | rey © 1 10 erg. 
Service bad Known him ery ol 


derey; ind now "Hehe" toſt- both. The Par. 


dhe would have chaflk'd them to have — 


| Monk tied) 1643: leaving! hin a Younger 


War, which before this Time had'reach'd'as 


wented of feaſonable Sur 
tions And how Intereſt at' O 7 opting he 


* 


Hient, 1 Fer raiſed in 
the World, Aire bad bebebrr Airele"wich him 


Hiament had-provided him Houſe-room, which 


7 Fes; but. thei A 


or 3 


des we bi Priſon che woes eaſy to him, 


Ae beſt Families) a Leal Anu for his 
Eife, which, in che Commotions' of that 
County, at ſo great a Diſt nce, was ill paid 
im; His elder Brother, Who had the Eſtate, 
being 6n the King's Side engaged in the 


far as the remoter Counties of Devon and 
"Cornwall. By theſe Accidents he was pre- 
plies from his Rela- 


s "hero — fo my o beter Off 


-cers 


GNM Mons. 17 =. 
cers and Perſons of Quality + af Ss... 


dition with.himſel who had powerful Friends 
at Court, that expected to he releaſed before 
him. Nor Mas it gaſy to offer ſuch a Perſon 1 
in Exchange for bim as the: . Backamanr | li 
would: by Illing to accept. 1 
Ag Sk li bo e _ | 
XI. Bu mths Gheattr that vas reecciv/d 
nf him, and thoſe ſmmall Conferences he had i 
with the King at Oxford, had left ſo fair an 4 
Impreſſion of bim in his Majeſty's Mind, that [| 
when; he: could. not procure Colonel Monks . 
Liberty, he was careful to provide for his ; | 
Support; and to chat purpoſe there was\ſe- 
Saar — him an e Pounds ig 


anne Med in v his Majeſty' s Coffers, Ss 4: + 
in many of his meaner Subjects. And this ſo J 
ſeaſonable and indulgent Bounty of the King ; Mi 
towards: him, he has been often heard to „* 
mention "_ a 3 nen wb ſenſible Gra- 
ande Tifi DI AIRIRLAT l 17 af 


xt a1; Da his e in 2 | nl 
Tower, moſt of the great Actions of the C- © ©. 
vil War were over, and their greater Battles 9 
fought, as at Manſtun- Moor, —— and 9 

dhe, Which made Colonel IAonts Con 


1 finement | = 


fr it fem 654 WhO bad 


5 * Enlat gement, 
mM! mon te > ferve 


1 with 'bi | 


© 7 ACRE 
. 
WS 4a A. . 
* 


hos necef- 
and — an the im 


VR 


wage, OATH 


CESSES; 


257 to his Pe 


[3  Pairivg of his Health; and having to Hopes 
at or Proſpect of returning again to Oxford, 
| _ there fell Gar a very ſeaſbnable Opportu 


his * upon this Occaſion. 


* ® 
. 1 F \ 
3 p "= x 4. ff 1 4 * $ C4 11 
2 5 


* 


= |. 64 85 XIV. 1 of Oma, Ge at 
111 eee Lieutenant General in the 
= Abſence of the Fatl of Leireſter) declaring 
1 Y for tlie King i in relanu,' with - 
s Regard to che Per ent at een, fo ö 


4 - 


x 


4 


Gx Al Moby. : 19 55 
1 Sad them eek rhe 4 


eiſlers on Regiment in Ireland, and there; 
fore was the more willing ro. ph! -A um 
Commiſſion from his Son... Beſides, he 


Wan he had 3 — ae Ng was 
F fd LAT Ne to, his Principles: and. Conſci- 

| , bh King, alſo: and: Parliament, who 
this Time could agree in nothing; elſe; did 
jointly vote the Iriſh then in Arms, to he 
Rebels. And Colonel Mont having xeceiv'd 
is Lib! ty for this Service, was too gene- 


rous to employ it to any other Uſe.. - IL 


before he quitted the Tower, he took Leave 
of ſeveral of his Fellow-Prifoners, / with 


whom he was acquainted, and, among the 


reſt, of the Biſhop-iof EA, Dr. MWren, from 
whom he den = his epiſcopal Rleſſing: tell- 


ing him, he was now going to do the King 


he beſt Service he could 28 the Rebels 
| in 


been e 4 — . 


* N 


ne vet" Was 4 
2 


2 


EI SN 
— * 


2 
2 * Cy 
4 — 5 " * * N 
rere 222 7 2 0 
Nr 1 — Dy 


q 
2 


II 


* 


* 3 


AIG 


2222 


e 
era * 8 


mw 
35 way — L a * 2 


— — 


— 


3 


N 


ſtar os 3 5 bas book lere. 
by chat Reverendand Pious 


y f 

he readify it at- 
{Who on the 280 of 
ont from" Lande towards \Ie- 
ed to land at 


Dublin, bur the ere 0 
received no Command from his Maj 
deliver up the City to him, | 
him Admiſſion, ' 'Thereupor 
and his Forces made their W ay into Mun 
1 and landed — ; er e 


the 1 bis Com diner 
he ſet Sail A an, 17, and eee pain i into 


"Gs IT 1 Mexx IX. 


va 


1 Ni tl 1 155 . CAP e YN; ant). 5; 


hag i of Irelapdhngainſt theft Rebels. The 
Dif We be ſurmounted. it this: Pro. 
„ able Iuſtente df l. 
engel nd vu. ent Care totaiarde he 
Suphont af . Heliens. III. Don u 


, Reaſons, be coic luded 4. Peate tvith\.O' 


| Which, he returned nta Eng- 


"lands. IV. It was: ſuſpected that he lu 


expreſs Commands, from England to-com- 
- (lade that Peace... 18 V. The Muri ber of 
the King. VI. 


going Lord Liewenant to Ireland. VII. 


. His eller Brother dies. VIII. He 17 
Ent. ; Id. A new Oc- | 


aut of all, Employ 
_ caſian. of his entring upon Ackion. X. 
| .Cro n wel, upon the Lord Fairfax t Nef. 
| 2 of. that 


makes Monk Lieutenant General of the 


3 : the Ordnance. XI. The great Confidence | 


that Cromwel ; 70 N fed. z him, and upon 
what Grounds. & 

the Scotch Clergy; and the Death of 
. the e XIII. A; Mif- conduct 4 


25 , . H 1 1 Whos t gd | 
ud tog again into the: 


The, General in hit Ne- 
turn 10 England, meets Cromwel rhen 


2 Employment, . is made Com- 
mander in Chief againſt. the Scots, wha b 


nl: 7 nimadverſi ons ou 


3 Tr J 1PE of * 


Cromwel, and the Error of it 8 
General Monk, by "which Means the 
Scots Were  deftated 4 Dunbar, XIV. 
2 good Eftetts of this Victory, though 
iu /ome Meafure obſtructed by the Remon- 
rare, XV. The Ki, ing with the Scotch 
© Army goes to Worceſter, and is purſued 
** Cromwel, who had left General Monk 
£ 1 reduce Scotland. 2 great Jucceſi 
e e: "He f I 34% Eno- 
| 2 1 Act of Coalition ro u. 
nite Eng and ah Scotland” into one Com- 
32 . XVIII. 4» Union of this 
5s. 1 ” kind had been proj effed by King James, at 
- "ewhich' the Scots were much di ſcontented, 
and for what Reaſons. XIX. General 
Monk appointed one of the Commiſſioners 
fr wie mr this dec tas 


_ » — _ 
— > 9 9 2 - : 1 1 , . __ a _ * _ r A TIS bens. 2 
2 S,, . 2 6 4 8 . 4 Hy 4 7 a oo 8 n N . : ö 
2 . en Manas _ - * 5 ": l . 4 oy , , ks ** 1 Ag ; . 2 
. 6 4 — * * * Os if] [ 6 $70. "26 00s. 5 " * — 1 N - = 8 n e 1 
. 923 2 een * he * „ Q EOS R * 4 2 n 228 1 5 way K q M 2 * — . 15 ev 1 Re 
ee tas ee e 2 FF rr * 
— — . 4 * r * 4 - a 
- Pars, 5 N Y X. e AT q 1 
on. . , ws — a ag ris nf . en 8 NG 
. _ IRGORS>—<=d Hes 3 
x 
. "A 


hw age his Thelinaciba rather to 

+ ſerve the Parliament in Ireland, than in any 
other Employment, ſome of the Members 
BY of Parliament knowing his Averſeneſs to be 
employed in the Civil Wars at home, and all 
. knowing him for his Courage and Exact Diſ- 

ny |  eipline, a moſt fit Perſon for the Iriſh Service, 
5 22 offered him a Commiſſion to 1 


_ Gaxin kn Mens 


which hes e e nn 


nor perfectly 158 cd ea 0 
be kept chen hoth ; in ſo gooc Onder, as he 
effectuall praſecui ed the War. Much of his 
neſs was againſt Oroen Noe r 
bold pſy reſtleſs: Rebel, and : accounted the 
beſt Soldier among them, having many Vears 
ſerved the King of = Wig Gp winked: 
ed up the Forces: under his Command to 
e atid Reſolution epo the uſu; 
of the Iriſſß: Vet Colonel 


kept him ſo ſhort of Proviſion, 88, 
weaty of 1 or 702 


walk 15 


3 d the Parlia dent — 
ſen had too many Irons in the Fire, to take 
ny Cate of Money or Proviſion for an Are 

- 4 orth of Ie land. | But e ng. 
Monks who: was not only a good Soldier, 
Wy wt Husband alſo, ſo ordemdgcbs Al 


44, 


1 
Norch of, elend, 


look'd. ſo narrowly aſter all his Goings, and 


* 
2 * £94 „ 


* 


— 


2 — ht Br ee ee, ren 


r 
— pe ner r 


g 


2 
4 

— ir 
4 


[4 
6 —oey 2 


a ati. 
. 


W 5 r 


** uy an ba 


The L IF T1 of 
ro idently diſpoſed of all Booties ON from 1 
x 3 . ar nad: * War 21 


Lamm 411 Things, th We his Induſtry and 
Conduct, had facceeded fo. well in che Nori 
of Treland, that the Parliament thought the 
Secoteh Forces unneceſſary in VUiſter, and 
voted their Diſcharge . which gave 
Occaſion to ſome fealouſies and Diſcon- 
tents between the Eugliſh and Srotch Sol. 
diers, inſomuch that Colonel Monk ſuſpected 
Monroe; and the other Scorch Officers, to 
Have ſome Defign upon his Perſon and Li. 
*y. At the fame Time the Marquiſs of 
— the Lord Inc hequin, and divers o- 
thers, coming to an Agreement, a great Patt 
of Colonel Monk's Forces revolted from him 
at Dandalke; fo that he was beſet with ſo 
many Difficulties, as enforced him to cloſe 
y nenen with O ag and to 
ur x into r r af 


Eg 


| . Bur this At 1 of Flo erdiaſces: 
| dent a Nature, gave Occaſion to many con. 
1 Perſons to believe that Colonel Moni 
being a Perſon of ſo much Honour and Cou- 
- rage, would not, by any Neceſſity whatloc 
ba bd "MA R 


<2 3 I o& 


| though he 


— 
* * 
* 
1 

4 
* * 

\ 
a" 
p 4 
AAS wat iff 
— 9. -- 1 


2 


———— 


| * 5 4 3 Wy 5 
o _— tht 2 N ; 8 F. Ker 5 2 
N F K A ONK. 
1. it: + Wes 1 1 * 


ye 8 hx e been br 95 ſuch an Apree- 

if he had not been 1 — 4 9 

ores to it by his Stpetiors in E y Su: 

who, being t refoly'd' to fall upon the oyal : "| 
Party in Ireland, made no Seruple to clap up ' 

a a Peace with t the Rebels. s 1 


2 
_ 9 5 


. 


« . 
—— ———ů— —— 


1 n Linn Tn d, 1 

. PE es before "ry A5 'Eole 1 
nel Monts Employmen ent in Treland, Was 1 
committed the execrable le Murder U 5 og) the 1 


Toby of the late King; A Action 2 


mpudence and Vilanf as can find tio Patgh ö 


140 in paſt Ag ng a8 
hardly believe =” Ang Wo let n me arreſt m 7 
Reader with" the Contem 6m f the divine 
Wiſdom, which had cee cd this Colonel 
Monk to For the Reſtol2f e. ibnerchy, zuck His 
preſenr aſty ; that he ſhould at 4 Time, 


in an Been ent of {9 much Diſtance and „ 
Privacy, as he 1 ald hardl dy Know, mngh Tel 
be concern d in ſo great 4 Guilt, as was the p 
Marder of that excellent king. e 


VI. Is bis Return 


' he met Lieute 
tant General Cromwel,” el 


haſtening to 


D 2 : Cell; ation | : 


2 D 1 4 $2 bs 14 has th © 
N n ee n nen * th $18 


the Party; be diſpoſed of. ö | 


onſite the 11h War; 1 five Regt : 4 
wents ts of Horſe, and ſeven of Foot. This 


—— rene 


1 5." OO BY 0 Neal. did ds; facilitate 
| | A Buſineſs, who „ in brat than F 


ns 


- #19 0s —¼⁊ 


vn „ this Time bis Ade Bothe, 
Thomas Mont, | Eſq; dy d by a. Fall fron 
kin Horſe, leaving only two Daughters be. 
| hind him; and the Eſtate being ſettled upor 
0 the Ie Malo, it came to Colonel Mont 28 
now Heir in Tail; Who, as he had raiſed his 
Name and Family to the higher State of No 
bility and ig io. 5 accordingly re- 
Paired the Ruins of the Family, and advan- 
ced it to a Condition e to . the 


e of its Quality. 


5 VIII. Sorben, "Mink 1 55 ki TEES 
| out of Treland, was now out of all Employ: 
"FO ment, and very well contented to have con. 
ö tinued ſo; but a new War: at hand * 
5 him again into Action. 5 0 e 


N. Arxus: dw Death of the late King 
3 Scots had entered into a Treaty with bi 
preſent Majeſty, for reſtoring him to bb 


* 1650; n of Scotland, which This Yea, 
5 came 


Sb AB Nen * 


| 11 
came to 40 vnefufion; bir @ on il 
| 


| { 


425 — —— ig — by 5 I {| 
of his F aſh: were now driving another, al- 


2 eprion in Scorlamil gave e 
a ſmart Alarm to the Parliament at-JY/eflmin- . 
fer. They eaſily foreſaw u War would en- 5% 
in, and therefore thought ir moſt agreeable 3 
allaatry and ee to be the 10 


lad And Lieutenant — E 4 
having done his Buſimeſs in reducing Tre/and, 1 
was return d to London as ſeaſonably as if he 1 
had contriv d it. Both he and his Party: were 1 
deſſrous, that he might command 4s General 1 

in this Northern Expedition, and fo! conſum- F f 
mate the Circle of his: Glories, by the Con- 
queſt of Scotland. The Noiſe of a Bruſhiwith | 

the Srots alarm'd all che Prerbyterian Party, 430 
nd ichejs * in England, who own'd 3 | 

D 3 — them- | 


bene of chem, who had 2 
ver the Lord Fairfax, and 
49 0 on ks Ly, had de practiſed upon both 
their Conſciences, that he willingly diſabled 
hinnſelf-for this Service. This Adva: 
5 Tur diſcernꝭd, if not at firſt e tri 
Crumuue and his Party, who- laygh'd.i in 
| their:Slbeves at the conſcientious Au 
the Presbyterians. Aud this 8 
Lord Feirfax was further promoted in 
by the Fineneſs of ſame of the demure hade 
pendents in the Houſe of Commons, that were 
in.Cromwe/slntereſt;:»$0 chat * the Con. 
cluſion the Matter was ſo decemiy carry d 
that: Creme + whe _— 7 the es Com 
* An ii 311193 1 n 
N Hanrmo gu the ee Ne ſa 
| long affected, his next Care was for modelling 
his A 


rmy, which indeed was made up of the 
Flower of the Engliſh. Forces. About this 
time he: had taken a particular Notice of Co- 
lows Mont; and obſerving how with ſmall 
Forde be had his Buſineſs upon the 
Rebels in a be found him an abler Of. 
fires! forthe mae ar, than inany of his 
a. 45 ſ | 4 | | own 


. ws 


D 


ee ee 


A _ Mon! TK, 3 1 


3 


— 
2 
* 


a Monk e War: C pony was/a Kind of 1 

and Prejudice ſertled in him a 1 

ever ſince their Redchtion "NY 
tofolencies: againſt Charles che Firſt in 

which War de had 1 been employ d. Tbhe ne 
r was chu Perfidy and ill Uſage be had mer 40 

with om the Seo, when be commiande 5 

| al dreland. -. = 583 | 


a 


Fr" 


* 


* 
„ 2 2 


. 
il 


= 


| « * 76 665 A 
* 17 1 1 "Jy þ * 
£ % R - 4 4 * ** 1 44 wo, KY fg * 


—— x ̃ 222 2 


— 
_ 
hm” . 


* 


—— 
of 


as — in this — be gain 4 fo 
Cromwel, as to be thought the only fit Per- 4 Ih 
lon to be truſted with the ſale Command of 1 
the eee By which Station he 
at laſt © egy ddd; "oO ans. 


| Tad 
1 
0 A i — . | / 
Mo Pop IE e en of * 3 * 0 4 - e 4 
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— prog 15 aſion * vet mr gg Go 
a great Army was always in Readineſs: But 

their Counſels were chiefly govern'd by their 
| agg and. OO — 4 me other 


Number 500 wild and: endless Babble a- 
bout their | Dovenant; 1o that Cromuiel was 
very far advanc d towards them, before chey 
had broug ht their A my into any. good 
neſs. to fill up the Meaſure of thir Vil. 
lanies with the Slavery of the N Nation, the 
Year before they had — fl 
the great and valiant Marquiſs &-Moreraf, 
who was accounted the beſt Man of Arms 
their Nation ever bred; whoſe: Courage and 

onduct, had he been alive and; entruſted, 
was more © chan — pee and 3 


10 NI pe Gp eee 
às far às Beruict, kept on his Way towards 
Edinburgh, and Goding the Scots not willing 
to come to a Fight, traverſed his Ground 
back again towards Dunbar, the Scotch Ar: 


= preſſing 1 hand upon his Rear. 


Here | 


* 


— ore orre  EeIIp a 


„ on Ne .. WA ot. anti. 


his Room go N 


ficers of the Seoteh Army, os thoſe Core 


fully routed; being a ber 
to their Enemies, ny nol; eſs d of ſuch gien 
Advantages upon them. But by the Fortune 

of this Bay, the Covenant was moſt miſcra- 


Numa — b his Diſcretion, 
The Score were Maſters of ths Nil, and b had | 
poſs d the Eng/i/b Army into a narrow Neck 
and, the Sea Selig them, and no Way 
the Pass at Cop pe mil, | 
then ſtrongly poſteſſed by t 1e cot e. No] 


fot Retreat but hy 


d Cromwel have willingly exchang d his 
amand wirh Pair fax,cor have been ge m 


he moved, to nz 


addiundeid 


del had ſecretly co 


nanters had been the arrant — 
Nature, they: could not have been fo than nel 


bly batter d by the Lord of Hofts, which Was 


the Word given in the ſeveral Armies beſore 
a 9 |  . "Vt Tow.” 


2 - 


2ondon;:"' But here the Expes 
e and ( Conduct of 0 Lieutenant General 


| Monk helpid bins ar che dead Lit, For ana 


Affenle u upon che -— ben neyer an Ot 


ole the Change bimſeltz wich fudh 
Sucsceſs, as ended in an entire . ; Une 


eee 8 
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42 
= XIV. Tus loyal Party in : Scotland wis 
not — tve concer 'd for this Deſeat at Dau- 

C cut off ſo many of 
lent KE — might well be 
But it had alſo/a ferther Effect up 
ache eee ir took 


_ Sin Refa ef 2 Par. 


8 


FR 


. 7 


eraying che . Intoreſt of Te fir Cbrift, and his 

dy a more refined ſort of whining Hy 
rites : Aud theſe were called the Neon 
firators. Which Schiſm of the Reſolutioners 


this: Reſo e ww tha 


which. Sccchded it, his Majeſty came the 
16 51! vc NV ear to have an Army which he could 
EET eg erte 


* 1 
- 


32% = ro 2. r WONT = N64 af rey 4 2 eee . 


er- 1 


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mY 


x yo v7 I <XL 


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Las pains Y 


ten Ca 


Gant Morbs Difoarch, thac be Mad gal 


 Ganeral Mans. 


better goyern, and were morg;obedicnt me tbe 
Methods he | \ deſigned. © Which, t 
Advaprage,, of 9 Army being paſsd - 
the 2 15 into 4 e gaye then the 

©d flipt i 


* it 


red this Pro it 


that Country, or b 12 — owing Fe 
ſo far, befor. as to 


ed after the King i into — heds warms 


ly proſecuted the Scots, that after the taking 


of Edinburgh Caſtle, the Surrender of Tantal. 
14 Rendition of. hrs ad 
eng Dundee, with, teyeral 
conſiderable. Places, yielding preſently to. che 


Fortune of the 


a ew Part of Et em that Time roms 


3 '&: 
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ener upon ni bin 

— ch þ Conbsderng) fell into 

s, which held him all the 

od: him to that Weakneſs, 

he was enforc d to return into * 


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Rand eh 


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eee. 


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} they: had framed an Ac of Coali- 
y both date thould d be united 


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4 TY p x R 65 4 


III. A Defign r which ing 

„ when he altered 3 Sry 
| and imed himſelf King of Great Bri- 

tuin. Great were the Diſcontents in Scot. 

about this Union. The loyal Party ut- 

+ terly declined it, in Hopes of ſome more ſor- 

5 tunate Seaſon to reſtore Monarchy. And the 


ners 


* 2 * SITE 


e 


. 
* 


0 ³ ¾ — -A i ny Os TR 
o $- one . * —— 


+ ot —— 


ö cCovenanting Presbyterians equally railed a- 


giͤinſt it. They had already obſerved the 


| Declenſion of their Presbyterian Government 
e here 


—— IR 


i | 
$444 * — 
ie oy r SY Uo ²˙e TV ̃ ⁰w̃‚ e ̃ own!CC ͤ ͤœ -f . ]! —_— It ‚ . er ee „„ EE ELITE. 2 r * — 


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5 GENEIAL Moßx. 45 5 p 
here in England, and were greatly afraid, ass 
ncy had already conquered their 
7, ſo it would ate their Reli- 1 


* 


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ir ee ST 
<> ms aſs 11 


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ba. 17 + x4 

XIX. T Kettle chi Uni F bott | 7 Y 

O0 e is. nion < th | 

+ ; 

g 


tions; Commiſſioners v were deg, down, that 4 1 


r * 


tenant . Monk, era — to dave 1 
better Knowledge of them, and Intereſt: a- 1 
mong them, by his late Command there, wass 
alſo added: Who, though he had con quered „ 
the 3 had your fo fair and 10 ho- 1 


10 an Dale d im, more 3 | 1 
Tricks and At ifices of the reſt. ee 11 
at Kft ſettled the ease ACCO | 
f | 
1 
4 
1 8 
0 N N 5 i , | 
$ £ 
9 a & 2 N | ; f 
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N 1 
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{| 
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& » * 1 | : $ 2 | 
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= 
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r 


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NW — 
: i Ee ** 4 
; . 


2 * 1 et 


nn 4 © 20 5 hi p. 7 ce 
E * Poives aud Pride of beg Pars ent 
incline them to u War with the Dutch. 
II. Blake made Admiral, who Lens ſome 
Auvuntager over th ek The next 
e Blake kind Monk of nad, Admiral, 


"equal in COM Von. _— The Zeal of the 
"Parliament in profect ting "this" War; 

| rebom, tel Randy, Crom wel if 

„ folder „ and ereFir'a Couttbil A he State, 70 


„ | wherein Dean: is killed. a 

- Monk ts hat 2 2 . 
5 Dutch, and the next Day ſinks” Ax, and 
Tate eleven of their Ships.” VI. The 
4 Dutch repair their Fleet, and the 
be - net Month the Engliſh Fleet engaged 
| them a third time; in whith Engagement 
i thirty of their . Ships were ſunk, their 


DE TIX amr pr urs rr ot, 
at — v . n 


i ' Vice. Admiral Everſton, and their Admi- 
1 ral Van Trump, killed by a ſmall Shot. 


| is VII. The farprizing Succeſs of this A. 
4 tion; upon which the States found them. 
at ene — fo ſue for Peace, with the 
HRT LEES | Conditions 


WR Menn. 
70 „ e 


7 OW was the Juncto pipe 


of their Power and Uſurpation, from which 
they quickly after declined. They had re- 
duc d Ireland, cunquer'd Scotland, and ut- 
terly baffled the King's Intereſt in England; 
which rais'd to that Height of Pride 
and — that now they were refoly- 
ed to reckon with their Nei N 
States of Holland, for certain lnfolencies they 
had ſuſtain'd from them. Hitherto they 
diſſembled their Reſentments for the Death 
of Doriſlaur, who went to complement the 
Dutch to an Alliance to their new Common 
wealth; and alſo the Affronts that were put 
upon their extraordinary Ambaſſadors, Saint- 


Jobn and Strickland. Neither wanted there 


Complaints about Trade, which they deſign- 
ed to reduce by an Act for prac Ma, 6 


of Navigation; ſucceeded with ſuch high L De- £7 


mands upon the Dutch for 


juries, and of ſettling a free Trade, Ge. as 
the States were reſolv d to enter into a War, 
rather than make ſo hard a Bargain for their 


Peace. N Honour and Eſteem of the 
Engliſh 


8 & 7 , 
LA mm 
47 7 , 
i 4 
4B B-1% 13 ny 705 11 
* 4 * . 2 y „ 1 * 4 5 1 #1 +4 4 


| N 
& 544. THO ate! ind ris OT, 22 


' Weſtniinfier come to the Meridian 


= PPP 
* 


hn Dr LEE NT eee IR 


25 


Eugliſh Nation was at chis Time utte 


ple, had: never — inſpet de 


= 


: . F : 
"PF 1 15 6 eee N * 7 
* * * * of *. £4 * * # * of 4 1 4 1 


y loſt 
abroad, by the bold and inſolent Actions of 


the eee Parliament, and the a- 


oniſhing Murther of the late King; ſo that 
che Dutch ſomewhat ſcorn'd to be firſt in 
Alliance with ſo infamous a People, 


and did 1 nies pong despite them. Nor did 


that a Revolt from their 
| Hann thrive in other Hands, 
Þ much as it had cove n witer wn, "The 


ugs with them, in Matters of N re ofit But 
now they were to deal with a courſe and 
ſcraping ſort of People, that would upon oc. 


cCaſion be quarrelling — them for their Pen- 


„„ 


ny, and look to their Trade with as much 
Concern as themſelves. After a great deal of 
religious T* on both n _— fel 


eee 


4 


1652 u. n rhe beſt Wear: of - this War, it wu 


managed on the Juncto's Side by their Admi- 
ral Blake; who, in a Fight near the Goodwin 


Sands, and nne near eee — 
. the n Fleet 2 1 Of nut ua br; | 


7 2 
e 
# ” 1 Ts 

1 4 — 


. 5 11. AGAINST 


re erryry yr moos 


CRT SY 


Pa = 
the War.” if bis was. 
ommandled e — | 
Year of his Age, to take up a new kind of 
Warfare at Sea. But as all Countries are a- 
like ara e 


8 
— 


14 2 


7 F 
mY #2 oh * ; L _—_ 
DFE 89 2d PAIR T lin edv 


4 


Sony mee 4 was - very baly'\fa 


4 os Oliver tere, 
bition could hold no — entererl the 
Houſe of Commons, accompanied with ſome 
Officers, and diſſulvd the Parliament, 
twelve Years Continuance in che 

Pradtice af Auch Miſchiefs and Depredations, 
as are not cuſy to be recounted. But though 
the Parliament was at an End, the Datch 
War went on, being rianaged for the preſent 
by a Council of State, made up of ſome prin- 
cipal Officers in the Army, and ſome Mem- 
þ _ make unc 0. 1 were Cum 


"4.5 9 


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— e eee e ? 


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r erer 


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—  —— —— — 


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watt <4 *% 
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2 — n 
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a * , 
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Dureh Fleet com 


rr OR Ir tre Ut 4 io rg ee 4 


n the EC 


nn 


8 31 ia. _ 'HE- e En ngagement chis wen, a 
aſt of \Fland; 


model by Slevin „ the 


5 and De Int; and their Number of 
he Engliſh was 


for," Goodſon with them. The 


in the M ning. At 


thing diſcompoſed 


8 dee ee be car- 

b the Sold: 
„ aAlid fol. 

eir 1 i ten of the Clock the 
arp, e y between the 
2 — and 
| | | Aadrc ,awfon:- To the 
5 Relief of the firſt Van Trump: came in, and 
1 GBegneral Moul in excellent Order ſailed to re- 
TEL Anſofce the other, ſo that now the Fight be. 
came ane denen Sides, till chree in the 
bout which Time the Wind fa- 
6 We Dureh they bore away before 


| EE. Vice- Admiral Vun de nat the tw 

[8  werrfon 

. Ships much the greater- 1 

* Ted wy General Monk a deen, having Jor- 
Fight began very early 
the firſt Shot from the Dutch F leet Dean 

was kill'd, walking by the Side of General 

Mat; who at his Fall (n 
ex Mind6r Looks) caſt his Cloak over 

. 0 — bidims: the Ship, 

f 

x —— ry — | 


1 — parked! rill Night by Genetal Mont: 


hs the next Morning, found himſelf near- 
(a 


* 


-- 


5 Monk. 1815 n/a 
ſunk ſix of their be beſt Ships 
the Dutch were,, ITO 
: up by. their wn F le 


their Ships z and diſturbin 
les than, wo, Mont d it 


: hundred t renty. 
Effort of their Strength 
July 29. both Flęets came in View of each o- 
tber. General, Monk had, not above AY 


io che next Day's Work 
In I E > f Morn- 


Ne on, an 


at Night: the Wind 80 wht ug 0 0 » 


T runni | 


VI ArrER this right Benn, ak 7 
upon the Dutch Coaſts; ſurprizi 


their Trade, Hill 


de Dutch had 


ether a very great Elect of about one 
five Sail, which was the laſt 


Str and Courage, And 


odd Sail of Ships, which were all a Stern, 


that till towards Evening they could not get | 
up to come to any Engagement; which f de- 
gan with ſome of the lighter Frigats, and en- 
| creaſed to about thirty, and fought till the 


Light parted chem. This was but the Premde 
For on the nes: 


1 


- 


"cok ot gee pro pe all — 


t * even oe were 
taken, that Day. from me: Enemy; the: reft 
the Flats. at Dunkirk: 4 el Wet 


ſeveral of 


Oy ůp —4ʃ— hʒ n ·²ñ̃̃ 2 
1 N 


a2 


2 
e 


— nngt nant.” * 
— * 2 8 
RE . 


wei on 
1 
renn 


. en ie ay en 
Which continued till a. 


INSET 
Ran 


e 
þ * . 
2 — 


WR 
A 22 r 


92214 en... 0 


began on all Hands, 
bout three in the Aſterhoon!. Tn' this Battle 
General, oben mich inferior to the E. 
nber, 2 8 commande the C 

deſtroy or fink What Ships 

hout taking of any; hereby 
. — to Weaken his Fleet, 
the Abſertce of thoſe that tuft go off 
with them, In this Fig Hit" were _—_ of the 
h Fleet near thir Tp among which 
ch the” Lofs 


yy 
4 


+ SOX 


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— 
. 
— 


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n 


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— — — 52 ON 


+ 
* 


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Foe 


4 


or pn 


dal 


7 
2 1 2 


2 al 


Ade, Vt chis Fig! 


5 * 


ged Seaman Pan 7 
Vickories „and Co me of 
x 1 bn ley chis 075 1 — | 


: Men 


. 
EULER RET Yi atone 


. Admira 5 Vid his 
n Sed 75 Wa Hand," as ie ik Wang on 
FEW | the Deck of his Ship *oura ing his Me 
| to the Fighr. I. | 
I with the Fall of their « 
diſcour 38 0 the Dutch H 
ſently made all the Sa "they 'could, 
into tha # (2.1.00 — 1 e 


WW 
ae \ BYE 
_ 45 "4 z 
N 
2 . 
* * * , 


- ECG "2 


* — 2 


* „ 2 


F 


Sh #g * 448 ”$ tx. LOTS. 
3-42 3 * 


—_— =: VIL Tarr 


/ 


5 { 1 My * 
— * FEE 3 0 . OO TEIN 4 J ** A . : ; 
paths 1 EYE 70 oe P r rr ” r wot F 5 0397 wrongly + uh ee rn — —— 

: —_ 4 rm pet opp er - 


'Gpxenas. Manx as ĩð 
* 1 Tay. who were at Leiſure to conſi- wy 
& 1 der the Circumſtances of this Fight, .. hay 4 +4 
+ wondered at the Succeſs of it. The Dat. Ti 
YT had much the Odds i in Number, their Shi 1 
l they had alſo Fire-Shipe with them — 4 | | 
8 Engliſb none. The Loſs of their beſt Com- 1 
7 mander, and of ſo great a Part of their Fleet, 1 
& put the States of Holland. into ſuch. Appre- 
7 henſions, and their common People into — 1 
0 Diſorders, as they haſten d back their Am- 1 
h baſſadors, who were newly return d home for £5768 
65 further Inſtructions, to make ſuch a Peace 
[. with the Z#g/i/þ as they could get. But the 1 
Council of State held them to hard Meat. They — | 
* would: abate nothing of their laſt . ee 200 
y made. from the. Common- wealth . 775 
; MW Nothing would do except, beſide ſtriking t 4 
| : F lag, LY V made a Recognition of the ne ; 4 1 
„ / Sovereignty to the Narrow Seas, a Rent |}! 
n to be paid for the Fiſhery, the Trade in the 71 
1 Indies to be free, and Satisfaction for all I 
„ Merchants Loſſes, and Reparation ſor the | Fi 
0 Charge of. the War, and a Coalition of both . 
Nations, to the excluding the Prince of O. 14 
n range from. any. Place of Government. Great | 


was the religious Knaz 8 


ry and Falſhood on 


1 ee the Dw#ch had already learnt | 
| + + 1 "= 9 | 


1 
: 
1 
: 
e 
7 
Z 
; 
: £ 
L i 
14 


. 


| 5 61 


to cant. and) wheadle f in che 


F * 1 1 * » * 1 £2. tt 8 = by * , 4 ; y 4 * 
7 Xx . af 7 8 . 7 5 1 1 7 48 £ 1 * 5 N « * 1 8 1 7 8 W p i 4 7 OY 4 6 g's, aid 
. N © £ * 0 * 3 . , * a . , 4 7 * It Fay”. 
: 2 1 , Os 4 £4, #2 BOS Fi 1 e * n b * 2. 4 * ** * 1 „ | 7 
q ; . N , 1. g x — 
I - Sug E . N : 
4 — * 8 
c | £ * ö i | 9 7 4 . 5 7 E 5. 1 5 # +. 1 4 1 * hy 
) « N 1 * $ . Ry „ « T7 * e 


1 The ltite Pam at Weſt inſter, and 
. 780 eir fanatical Projetts of” mncorporating 


bb ſeven Provinces. II. 7. he Dutch Con. 
„ [27 nd ers” at 4 Loſs how to treat with 
= :::-.1-7 Men, who ſe ny chemes and Principles ap- 
i 1 Peared /o very chimerical : The Deſign 


© ""2oþich Cromwel had to ſerve by them. Ill. 
| Havi laid them aſide, be tubes the Go. 
dDerment upon himſelf, with the Title of 

Protector: ; makes ſeveral Condeſeenſi ons 


| EZ}: 7 the Dutch Commiſſi ZONEY'S, towards the 
JJ efeftual Secluſion of the Houſe if 
vg |. unge from the Pouer and Dignity of 
3, BE  Stadbolder. IV. The Articles on both Sides 
1 In Reference to this Point. V. The States 


| General aſhamed 6 of 7 ir, yet, by the Advice 
De Witt, they at laſt agree to it, aca 
. ferret Article, but without the Conſent of 

. the other Provinces. Upon which a Peate 


| is concluded bet gen England and Hol- 
| i wherein Croft wel — the Puh. 
1 * lich 


GENIAL Moxx. | 5 
lick Intereſt to the p rivate End of hir. 


lice and Ambition. VI. This Agreement 4 


. oppoſed by General Monk, bu 70 0 ff 1 
fecl. VII. An Army raiſed in Scotland | 
for the Service of the King, and by what = 
Means their Deſign was fruſtrated. VIII. | 

Zet Cromwel, anxious for: the Succeſs of 1 85 
it, and ſuſpetting Lilbourn e Courage, 5 
who commanded. the Engliſh Forces there, 8 
he recals General Monk for the Scottiſh 
Expedition: IX. General Monk envied. BY 
His cautions and prudent Behaviour: Hir [| 4 


** Nn 


great Affection fur his Country. X. A 158 if 
_ cial Reaſon of Cromwel's s employing" him j 


in this. Expedition, from: whence. be re- l 
turus 10 more, till he is made the happy 1 
Iiſtrument of the Reſtoration. XI. The 
State of Scotland upon his Arrival there. 5 
De Ihe be made of their extravagant rt 


— ay ber owt or wats hoe 
r — I. nnn 
: N k - 


| e and gn abogt Religion, . 
A7 HILST this DutchWar and Tris i 3 i 


Mackin,/ called the Little Parliament, was 
ſitting at Weſtminſter. A ſort of little inſfi- 
pid Fops, whom Cromwel had ſet up, to 
make his laſt Step intq the Government the 
eaſter. ö of theſẽ were ſettling a Sm 


ty were carrying on, that pretty _ 1 | 
} 


—_— — 
PP r * 
W r . + a . 2 0 
7 _ Peg” _ * 


— 11 
N .³ „ een * 1 


9 
K 
J 
* 
| 
ö 
i 
: - 
: 
4 
k 
. 
* i 
© 
[4 
4 : 
ö 


Aura dulyy for Jean Ghrifin the Wotld, bt 


were at ſome Leſs: 
| ted. 3 Peat 


The ITE 


yet ſo as to make themſelves his V joe gerents 
———— upon the Durch as C y 
If ing, COVELOL s:Worldlings;/ and Ene. 
ies to the Kingdom of Ci, as well as 
thar of Eug land, fo that nothing would n- 


tisfy\ chen leſs rhan a Coalition, whereby, che 


0 r Fifeb-Manerely. en 55 
. 9 J gt; 417 A r 
wi Fer Dix and formal Ambaacor 


for gle an A Dodtlave: of E 


$enarors and had look'd ſo fur into the State 


of. and the ambitious: Inclinations of 
Ge that they cuntingly inſinuated, if he 


would aſſume the Government himſelf, they 
ſhould be more ready to a Compliance with 


hint. ' Theſe People were certainly call'd to- 
gether by Cromwel only for a whine to ſhew 
Tricks to the People, and play the Fool with 
the Government, that thereby the Nation 


might be as willing as himſelf to have the 
n en into a more ame, Hand. 3 


*, 


il. The Reſignarign of, this ene 


Power was r after contrived; and on 
Jy OY © ner 


* „„ „„ „„ % „„ „ * 3 


GREVEN l. Mate 


| December 16. he uſurp d the Government, 
_ the Title of 'Protefor. Being now: more 


$7 


ty woking ater his Enemies at home, than 
to proſecute a War abroad; aud that he might 
— entirely the Article for Secluſſon of the 
Houle of Orange from Stadholder-General, 


or Admiral, and no Entettainment to be 


given to any of his Enemies in their Domi- 
nions; he was willing to deal very indulgents 
ly with them in the reſt of the Particulars: 

And therefore he accepted the Article for 
riking the Fl 
the Title: Inſtead of a Coalition, a Defenſive 
Alliance ſerved the Turn. The Fiſhing paſs d 
without either Leaſe or Rent; and the Mer - 
chants, for their free Trade and Satisfaction 


3 e were 1 left in the Lueck: 


itt oil Ri 4 * £21 
IV. kur view! edious:to "ke all the Tricks 
and Artifices that — between the Prote- 


dor and theſe amg e 


of Secluſion. A e 
* N 26k 1 157 

5 TaEAE was: r Is 
gratitude in che thing it ſelf that both the 
States General and their Agents were utterly 
une of it it: Inſomuch that Re: Protector 
e 3 at 


cern'd to provide for his own Settlement, 


ag, without a Recognition of 


” n ws * a as 
CE OE EO eee 
5 .! ”; * % . 


— rr 4 ot Se ee REIT <tr 
* * © HE > +> — — . — — 
* ä 5 * * 2 8 


PE IP EI * 
PO 
* — 4 — 44 has 


WU oe EO AGILE I 
a 
» 
of 


— 


ſecrer ente —— it refaſed 


— f a 
to exchange the Ratifications. 
States of the Province of Holland and JYeft. | 
land, guided by the Counſels of the 
late Penſioner De- Mitt, and without the 
Coneurrence of the other Provinces, ſigned 
this ſecret Article: That they would never 
clect his preſent Highneſs, nor any of his 
Lineage, to ela Riker or Admiral of their 
Province: Neither ſhould rheir Province give 
their-Suffrage or Conſent; that he, or any of 


his Family, ſhould be Captain General of the 


F. orces of the U. fed Provinces. This be- 
ing ſent over to the Ambaſfadors, and by 
them delivered to Cromidel, the Peace was 
preſently and finally concluded, and the 
three hundred thouſand Pounds, which they 
oſſerd the Year before to the Common- 


wealth Parliament, was alſo thought to have 


been caſt into the Scales, being a ſeaſonable 
Preſent to Cromewes, wherewith to ſupport 
himſelf in the Infancy of his Power and 
- Greatneſs. And thus (as an Eſſay of his fu- 
ture Government) he'abandon'd the Concerns 
of the Nation, and all the Adyantages of this 
War, to the 1 E re own W Malice 


and Ambition. 6 
" 1 v1 "OR 


At laſt the 


Sb} N. 0 


have been forc'd to interrupt” by this nect 
fary Digreſſion)” was, duriny 


ing upon the Darth Co e, uf 5 
their Havens, and interrup! ib che ade; 
and did all he could to hinder this Agreement: 


PE 1 


He exclaim'd againſt it, as 4 thing Aenne 
and diſhonourable to the Nation. Her 


ſented to them, that the Durch could not be 


able to fight another Battle; and that they 


bad never an Ally in the World that would 
be concern'd for them. But all he could do 
was only to remonſtrate againſt it. The time 
was not yet come for Geser Monk; by his 
own Authority, to govern the great Concerns 
of the Nation, nor to iz? an Ln to ion; 


tion and IT). 


2» 12 


VII. The pro "OR ines had no PROT 


er concluded the Dutch War, but another 


begun to be formed againſt him in Scotland. 


The Marquiſs of Athol, the Earl of Glen- 
garn, and ſeyeral of the Nobility, having 
declared for the King, had raiſed an Army 


in Scotland, conſiſting of about eight or nine 


thonſand Men, headed and commanded by 
Officers of the principal of the Nobility and 
1 + of . Nation, to which ſome Fe orce 


vl GrrAAL Monk (whole Hiſtory we 


this Treaty, 1. 


* IC 
* 


0 — 4 4 
PL * 


— 


2 r Z 
1 * N 


* 


— 


— 


— 


— — 


e 

as. e , , e II 

120 th AS cue — — 2 3 * — — yo mee — — 
N 8 


Which the Nobility had 


f ter diſſen Die 


* * * 7 * 
RO Ir oe Aer 2 
e ——— — Ra 
. p * 1 * — 2 


TY bo) LIFE 'of 


out of Helland by Midaletou was > be ad. 
ded: Who, beuge he came from-his Majeſty 
with a Commiſſion to be General of the Amy 
raiſed, did yet dil. 
oblige them, and afterwards the. Withdrawing 
and dividing. the Forces, e e the 
aer de che Attempt. 1 


nf 3 11e 6 in Helen 42 


in forning of his Uſurpation, did great. 
ty ene his Protectorſhip (who could bei 
e his Hatred than his Fears) not 
ing how far it might ſuddenly prevail in 


i 8 reſtleſs and diſſatisfied. at the late 
Coalition, and that were watching: upon all 


Occaſi ions, to recover again the Loſs of their 
Repurarion, with the Liberty of their Coun- 
try. Since the Removal of General Mont. 


out of Scotland, Colonel Dean commanded 
in Chief there, and being afterwards called 
off by the Juncto to be the Admiral ia the 
Dutch War, Colonel Lilburn was entruſted 
with the Government of the Country, and 
the Eugliſh Forces there. Him  Gromwe! 
thought a Perſon of too little Courage to be 
truſted at this Time with ſo ſtrong and tough 
an Employment. Beſides, he had already dil. 


e his own Weakneſs and Fears, by re- 
preſenting 


Guvts aL Mel 1 
Feſcnritg;'tH6/Bfidels ro thi Prbtectör Werle 
hag indeed it was. 15 Ki ues 1 . his a 


Choe of A Perſon fi to be et oy 
the” Command of ſo large 3 nde 
Countty was not to be diſpoſei of 
tures. By his aſſuming the Goya) 

the Quality of a ſingle Perſon, He had AC 
pleas d ſeveral” of his ſtouteſt Officers, that 
were for a free Common: wealth; and tbere- 
fore. was reſoly d not to employ chem further 
Among his own. Relations (whom he Vould 
de truſted) there was not a Perſon fir 
for this Service. Some of his Council pro- 


Cromwel better underſtood the Man, and 
knew him to be a coarſe and boiſteroys 
Clown, that wanted Senſe and Diſcrerion. 
Fleetwood was as unfit as the reſt of them. 
Arid for La wbert,. he reſolyd not to ruſt 
him ſo far out of his Sight. The only ſuir- 
able Perfon for this e Expedition Was 
General Monk, who had reduc d the aue 
e and who beſt knew 4 to 
ors. 8 N. 


pos'd his Brother-in-Law, Dedborow 7 but 


* 


— — 


+ ens — 1 — 
2 . ane 
— 256 mn a ai 


K Lowe Finger ws, of 


—— 


” 
l 


wh any, [ * che Tr of the ee 
by ha ebe in the laſt 
r Was beco ir ſuperior: 80 
1: of them, begay to emulate and 


| wp | his. Greatneſs. He Hes. unluckily 


theſe People, ra cher by his ill 
any Choice of his own; but was 
ſpecially” careful to keep himſelf from 
dir, greater Guilts and Hyz xcrily.. H 
N never be concern d in; any of 
more ſecret Intrigues or Cabals, neyer pre. 
tended. to their Frenzies of, Preaching or 


| Praying; nor to any of cheir, Revelations or 


npulſes, But as a ſtout and valiant Englih- 
man, he loved his Country, and ſtill — 
Gar ſome botter Sealon 10 expreſs it. 55 


2 


1 7 _— 3 yes] 2 | 
7 1 was, 5 fagg elted, 10 ſoon as 
the. Protector found, by 88 with Ge- 
neral Monk, that he was no ways diſſatisfy d 
with his, diſſolving the late Common- wealth 


. 


1 e B that he had 1 no Concern for 


at Intereſt, he preſently entruſted him ay 


the Command of Srotland., And becauſe all 
things then run into greater Diſorder, he was 


haſten'd away to his Province, taking his 
Leave of Cromweh, whom he never ſaw more, 

nor 
5 


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d * — 8 1 - * 1 
Fe : Ty : 
9 7 - 

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nor ſer his Pat oot acai into 0 E Ben ll he 
. back with him the ne aud 
53 1 | Tex 5 W Nth Kh N * 


W W ne bo 


30 W . 


oft KT! Ax, l . 
order. oY -quenalous,.. diſcomtcnted. b 

an ungovern d Army, fill, 1 

violent Fanaticks. and 4 l . 
nn and \they. had, AT and jultled 
the Presbyterian Clexgy ont of their KRS 
and Pulpits, and expos'd; their Diſcipligs' to 
Ridicule. But General Monk, Who Was o 

wary to be concern d in any of their religious 
Diſputes and Extrayvagancies, quickly fonnd 
them ſome other kind of Employment for 
their Diverſion. And having ſettled ſome ne- 
ceſſary Affairs in Ediniygb, be preſently 


i 
* JE? * S * 
* 


Lans 5 
«th 6 


P 


draws. out his Army, and marches them up 


into the High- lands, where. he kept them ſo 
cloſe to their Work, as 
lgious Madness. N 


od 
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i 20176¹ LO Hi Ar p. d 33499 
I. The Earl of Middleton amt great Diſt 
culties in rhe H ighlands; bebe Gene- 
407th | Major General Morgan, 
ache, Mer bun. II. The 'Eart holds a 
: ene, en, and determines wot ty 
204 Genera at Forces: TOE; Crom. | 


00 Narr obs Fg 2 5 ere — 


Mea bf a: Party 'of the Scotch a 


| - which the: Earl of 
ode; "efeapes 10 Holland, and his 
down their mn VI. Gene. 


17 Monk hires D Dalkeith-Houſe, « A he 
22. his Head. Buarters during his Stay 
in that Connrry. VII. Regulates the Ci. 
vil and Religions Affairs of Scotland, and 
ns the Power of the Kirk. 


HE Citadel, Forts, and Caſtles, and 
all Places of Strength in Scotland, be- 
ing Mendy poſſeſſed by the Engliſh Forces; 


the __ of — * no Garriſon or 
| Retreat 


8 CD NE EET ES . * — 


& 5 39 

4 & % $7 

f +..4 

* * 8 
72 4 + 

9 

1 

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Monk deere his March, np ure 78. B 
try, had already laid 1 p Provifion, 


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from his former - hw at ce. Johnſton's" s'0 


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Leith, by which Means his _ was —— 


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WAY 19s, 404i; tithe 


RN ene ng % 9547s 


e 


Kknowiny how many Enemies he had, both fo 


4228 


. 


SH A9 


49 11. 5 wy We * i: pt tt Þ 11 


Hazktd'6t Loſs of their Whole 


: — FL %, 2 WM, I, * Ul " Fs a FIT 5 4 & | 4 fy 


Kt» 85 * 3's; 


wel, being not vet 


uy . „ 


——— — —— «4 —•—UF «c 982 1 1 4 " Ny * 
, * £ nde 4 „ „%% flue ern ot En 
5 


hended thei 
i Urre iv n 
having” | op 45 ad more ne 
Highlands, ad y his ſecret * wits 
tempted ſome of the Seh — wy 5 


for this their haſty - Ri "he Was content 
t their Subm 


warte upon laying 
down their Arms, and returning quietly to 
their Hooſs,'they ſhould be reſtored to their 
Eſtates and Fortunes. Which being offered to 
them in the midſt of ſo many Straits, beſides 
eca. of their Forces, alid the ill Poſtate 

flats, induced them not to put all 
upon ſo great Diſadvantage, but ra- 

her bar Gr ch prof in B 8 
Yo. and; retoring their 


IV. Seht of the more eager and 2calous 
Officers in the Hug. Army were frequent- 

importunate with him, to come cloſe 
o — Enemy; and enforce them to a Battle. 
But General Mon better underſtood the Na- 
ture e of this War than his inferior Command- 
e F 8 ers, 


. evt erer abt „ een „ renner ** 


* ; 
- 5 Z — 
| 


7 $ : . 1 . 0»; n , 8 W 1 4 in, 
4 ; 4 TH '# #4 
| — b f Fam. 
: n * 
> » 6 . 


try in the Army, and ler them know, that, 


7 N N * 
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I — 
* 


2444 — 
——— — — > 


—_— 
— foam 9 > ae 


— 


—— A + 
— 


rr 
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14 
i 3 
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[ 


252 
PPP 
2 : . Wen 


 Seorch Army by ſome High he 
ed his Officers, that the | Army. was 
in ſuch Difficulties, an Ho. daily decreaſing, 
that would be certainly done 
„ Without a Battle: Nor did: they een 
1 fad ha ada in his Prognoſlicks. 
Bur in the interim Major General Mor. 
K gon. 1 char Pare of. 05 225 7 Force 


© pn thy ee which the Earl of Maddie 

-" retreated to an Iſland, from -whence after. 
ward he got back again into Eolland. O. 
* Y and Officers making 


1 e; of © the ghd, war Ws no 8 of 1 
VEE > - 54-5, 0b 722 had ever left a Footſtep behind them, 


| a which the Inhabitants accounted inacceſ 
| 1 ſihle to any but themſelves, by the End of 
| | Auguſt he return d to' Edinburgh, which, be 


ing the capital City of the Nation, was tht 
moſt proper Place of Reſidence: * the Pre 
be t enen * T. 2 * 4 1 1 oy | 


ed, TY Bay PAY a, nent Bobo 


* 2 83 ” - 
. 
4 „EF ²˙ A — he od te ie ene pnetry 
ö 12 25 ae 
4 5 — * i 


al Monk, who always af. 
el rhe-1 Lena. y and Retirement of the 
Country, and taking a particular Fancy to 


Tenant to i 
Quarters during , 


is more than five Years: 


commodious Diſtance of five Miles from. E. 
linburgb. Here, in the Intervals of publick 
Buſineſs, he diverted himſelf with the Plea - 
ſures of Planting and Husbandry; 75 Abe Neige 
therein ſome of the Conſuls and Dictate 

the ancient Rome; who, after they had mb | 
dued Nations, and led Kings in Triumph, re- 
turn d again to their Tillage, and with their 
own Hands dreſf, cd. FOG * and 1857 
1 n 5 


VI; Hel 050 Reduction of the High 
lands, there being now no Enemy in Arms 
in Hcotland, General Mau found himſelf at 
Liberty to inſpect the Civil Affairs of the 
Country. And becauſe the Covenanting Cler- 
were grown ſo inſolent in their Power and 
Influence over the Government and People, a 
particular Care was uſed to abate their Rigour. 
They had indeed the undiſturbed Uſe of their 


„„ Kirks 


Green Ae 69 


the Situation of Dalkeith-Honſe, became a 
here he continu d his Head- 


Command of that. Country. It was pleaſant 5 
ly ſeated [in the midſt of a Park, 401 at the 


1655 


F 1 


1 
1 


RK 


—_— 


e r 


— 
p 
s 4 . 
" * 
h X +.» 5 Ts þ 1 ** I. 8 K e 2 8 
r YO 0 TION DO ON ng : 3» 0 
* — . * — + #4 Vine Orv er AA . — — — 
* 0 * 4 Sy vw N ac > ” * * a 2 as 
K 
. E 9 E rb »* * ns 4888; if . _— 7 5 
* = — 1 . 8 FP K 8 A * ms — > Dd 


3 


=> mer EPR; 


| Kirks and reac 
Command; bur were not permitted” the Li- 


the en of their Religion, or the prag 

matical Spirit of the Clergy, they are greatly | 
inclined. The Power of Excommunication, 
and the Conſequents upon it, which was the 


indeed connived at, but their general Aſſen- | 
hlies difturbed and forbidden: So that they 


ors Or org 2 anger 


by their Party in England, had the Conf. 
dence to outlaw the late King, when he for 


ons at the Command of a Corporal. Nor were 
the Nobility and Gentry permitted to wer 
Swords, to ride on a Horſe of Value, to pro- 


> 


each ing during General Mont! 


y of making Reflexions upon their Su. 
or the Government, unto which, by 


Palladium of Presb) terianifin, was wholly 
taken from them. Their Presbyteries wer 


who ſome Years before, in the Hight — 
Ruffle of their religious Zeal, being abetted 


bad their Affemblies, were now ſo reduced 
and baffled by the Engliſh Army, that they 
would have diſſolved any of their Convent. 


ſecure their old Animoſities among thermſclye, 
nor to exerciſe any arbitrary and violent Pri 
Qices awards their Inferiors and Servants. | 


155 . 


— 


Nan | 


TAs 299104 5 
Nan C 3 izt; 


N. 


a „ 4 1 pa Fer . n a 4 
4 * ; bl ; 6-7 x 
M l 9 1 
27. th; *% ve b *%. 25 - 2 
f % , x Gs 5 . 15 
* * * f P 9 * 


. 1065 5 3 
1 HO pointe « Conc Lk rats, ur- 
e here Monk. 
e 1 I. 77 
Colonel Oyerton, endeavanurs to 
Army: and deſiens the. Aten 4 of the 
3 but. it detectad, and Hut Pris 
finer. 49 London. IV. Scatland agiert 
Treat 2 and Plenty, under the e 
* Auminiſtration. V. EY ves 
2 how... VI. He is under 
far ile Death of his # e's of 
zendly Correſpondence between 
"the Gon and the Scotch Nobility and 
_ Gentry. VIII Which was improved by 
bis Enemies to the Confirmation of Crom- 
wel Jealouſy of him; whereupon Crom 
wel writes to him. IX. Cromwel's arifut 
Mauer uf | Writing. X. At the fame 
Dime be was very weak in truffing 4 Per- 
_ ſon whom be . dra "Ss a n of - 


Les Coma | 


ND Now . "AER San ng fully 
11 ſecured the Subjection of Scotland, 
there was appointed by the Uſurper a Coun- 

WE © i 1 5 cil 


wc ds 


. wor ta dr of Bee Cs "GARY Ar BY Cams, AB nyt 4 we 4 
_ 22 PS —— —— 2 Ir oa FR 


_— 


— 
— 


————ÿ — — — 
4 


Ont on ro ei gig, A 
wr en oa 2 1 


eren 


— < et 
—— 


o 
*1 
4 


th {du unc k ä 
nel > 27, Colonel William 
FF 1 Wed Seroop, Colonel 
Jobs Witham "and Major General "Desbv. 
e, To this Employment they © 
thorized: by A Commiſſion” whe" Cromweel's 
Broad Seal, dated June 1655, though tl 


= 


| came not down to exerciſe their Commiſſion | 
in that Nation till about the middle of Sep- 


1 


vember following. By which they were en- 
abled to order and diſpoſe of the Revenues in 
* $corland,” to appoint the Officers of the Ex. 
chequer, the Commiſſioners of Exciſe and 
Cuſtoms, and of the Sequeſtrations, and al! 
ſubordinate Oſſicers under them. They had 
alſo the Nomination of all Juſtices of the 
Peace, of Sheriffs # and Commiſſaries in the 
ſeveral Counties; which Commiſſaries kept 
their Puget for Probate of Wills, and grant- 
9 an r: er mn Gromwel, 1 
they were afterwards authoriz/d'to approve 


and allow of all Incumbents that were to 


— 


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i 


— 


. 


— — 


2 — LC: — 5 
a * 


wn 
— v0 ro an wore, 


—— — 


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— — — a7 
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—.— 


ber admitted into any Eecleſiaſtical Bene. 
Hoe! 151 % 1 1 1 S2 1 nd * 1 unde We | 1 * 


+l tt [OX * 0 a. <4 r. mh 
Dan 1 'lL Tals | 


* 


22 lere, very eee, 
ion Which at laſt intro 


4.) 


* 
' 0 ö * * BY 7 L 
Fe $ 8: - % £22; * AT. — * 3s ae 7 


4 4 1 af F & , 
7 on £4 n 1 3 * x * * : * * ? 55 1 5 * 7 4 ; 112 8 
2 7 2 4 * 3 . 5 57 8 1 : F* 4 $ q 2 7 5 1 1 3 
8 ; 8 


iI. nauer this Time che Conti nw 
piny i in the Army, who ſecretly Ne 
the Protectors Government, were — 
Deſigns againſt bim, which were to ae Ef 
fect in the Armies of all the tl ons. 
Among whom Cuoner Overton was one 
who had ſo far diſſembled his Diſcontents, 
as to obtain the wn vr y- of 2 Ge 

neral of the Infantry i neral | 

Army; where he quickly Fel to pradtifing 
upon: e eee 3 Wr Soldi ie 


2 has wie the old Pie. 
ug the Lord, a conſiderable 
1 of | Male-contents met in order tod: de 
this Besen at rain: He had held ſe- 

ere ſecret] Meetings, and framed a ſmart De- 


3 | 


” 
- — — - Go oo OB ů — er ne, — w 
* * 1 0 * . + Ive 0 


„ 
. 
OE EC ¶ꝗ ͥä — — 


K x 
PIC” 
oO Rouge. NT e 
2 ket? 8 
1 5 . 2 up 


3 


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. 

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= 

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5 

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rn — — * 


. Denner 


5 


16, 


Ane again, One oy 5 Govern. 
ment; racer ding fo far as te qeſign to him. 
felf the chief Command of the Kagliſb Army 
is ele Which could was. be, effected by 4 
y the Death of General Must, whom they 
— reſolv d to ſurprixe au Neu Fears Day 
in the Morning, and Miles Sindercamb at 
terwards more famous for deſignipg upon the 
Life of the Protector Cramei] was one of 
the Aſſaſſins. All this Practice was not fo 
ſecretly carry d, but the wary General had 


Natice of it. Ad having taken Care. for his 
own: n. he luffered Quertes and his 
Acee eeed, till he had ſufficient 
Matter againſt them, and then impriſon d 
them all in their ſeveral Quarters. Overton 
he ſent up to London to be reckon'd with by 
the Protector himſelf; who laid him faſt in the 
Tower, having before ſrcured many other 
Qikicers of the Faction in — Goals and 
and Caſtles. 2 
to Major Gener: 
of the Confederates, C Ge: 
_ ealbired chem. 
Nr n | 
V. A . ne 
we find no more Diſorders in the Country 
2 the General's 2 there; but an 


> FARRTYHH univerſal 


verton's Regimeht was given 
1 an * the reſt 


jection, yet they: had a great Opinion of bis 


oy . ee, 


GK x r A 1 M TIM 77 5 
g chem: and (che Ef Lt 


| < 


univerſal: Peace 


Tax in Feng land, the ſixty thouland Pounds — 
per Menſom, and what was further aſſigned 


Don England: So that the Soldiers, being 


well paid, were inabled to diſcharge - their 
aly, and the Money did ſo uniyer- 


Quarters 
ally circulate through the Co 


was never known ſo much e den in 
Cor land, as during General Man's Com- 
mand there. He had formed, his Army to a 
very exact Diſei 


line, ſo that nothing was 
more rare than ro hear of any Mutinies a- 


or Depreda 


h ves tions on the 
People: "bench that though General ion 
continued among them to ſecure their Subje- 


Generoſity and Juſtice; and fo much Kind- 


neſs for his Soldiers, during a long and peace- 
able Neighbourhood together, that they look - 
ed 
of the Place, or a Part of their Country; and fs 
2 rather of their Safety and Li- 1 


upon them no otherwiſe than as Natives 


\ | go 


tha mente Of n r nN 


8 fy ” ay” | 

— 9 ; 6344 . 655 BEET 00 , 1910 * Tal i _ 1. ; 
hea 
Wo. Hreamro | 


fect of Peace). ao-uniera e 
providing che pay for his 3 * —— ho | 


WON PTT 


18 . "4606s Vhdcral ; 
Mink | Bed bis {6* 10 Command in Jcot- 
5 N his Je eatouly e 


Hons over His Kimny: 57 
Regiments Which he moſt truſted, 
ing down to bim all thoſe reſtlels and Violent 

ties, Which he could leaſt goyern in Eng- 
Aud. And theſe furious andi Hair brain'd Se- 


ctaries gave him frequently a great deal of 
Trouble, before he could take down their 


Mettle, and bring them to live comp tin in their 
ar ee know: Di MR.” 4. 
I, vl ABer ys ö mar as an Athy to his 
Palicties, General Mou loſt his ſecond Son 
George; who, in his Infancy; dy'd of a Fea- 
ver, attended w ith Convulſion Fits, and was 
buried in the Chapel of Z Diltrith-Houſe: The 
Death of this Child affected the General with 
fo unufizal' and deep a Sorrow, as was greatly 
admired by thoſe,” who know not thay, in the 
higheſt! Courage, there is a f the 
greateſt Tenderneſs; or have not rok; how 
that the brave Euplius was 'ſoriconcern'd 
for the Death of his two Children, that it 


rook from him the chief SatisfaQtion of his 
OE EFT 8 late 


Garth Mere. Ba 
late victories, and withered. the. 1 relg 

bis T᷑I | h. eee 711 J 1700 207 
ie noqu 5201 20 3010 1521 


vn. | L Soon the ae" of pom : 


liry: and .Gensry 


| of their Gens | whom t e 
ed; and there were among 
thy and hon ace deen enen 
h as he frequently ese 
Bon, and did adyiſe with them in the Manage- 

everal;publick Affairs in their Coun 


pars 'Kindaeſy, iſo far as the Condition of AF 
fairs then, and the jealous Temper of the 
Age would admit. And though General Mon- 


abated nothing of his Diſcipline, yet by his 


N other Methods of Moderation a nd Pr. 

be had ſo far obliged all Parties, that whit 
2 \the Protear, With all his, Art: of terrifying 
or informing, could not "keep kimſclf a Year 
routid from. Deſi igns or, Infurrections againſt 


eee him 
„ &, 7 4 1 * 4 , 


4 a great Vene che Memory. al J 


Even the brave and valiant Party of the 
id. had 2 Place inohis Eſtimation 


- 
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the 1 is Scotland 
further Plot or 1 2775 Ne hes. - F 


* hc - es. : 

5 e * . | 4 „ * 5 * is 

N * 2 1.20 a9 10 wot? N "CI 33 
A. % 2 


led Him to other 
pi $010 todo 


Sodtland called 


15 \ 9 1 


1 . F 
er 2 4 


„ 


1 Abba Me 


IN. Turs was a kind of Grimare 
Pro ecor, to wrap up his Saſpicions in Drol 

And it Was another Part of his Cun- 
ing to _ chat in ee 3 in 


OF n 2 4 Wits 5 2 „ 1 
YL : 1 + 7 ; 
„ * N 9 0 1 4 4 a. . þ * N ” "FS 8 1 9 3 


Mer * che Eon upon Ge + a 
of Hoy nog 3 did not firs ar iſe 


cock Gez 3 bur it was an A . — 
that did long before diftrefs Net Minds of 
thoſe, wh perry "apr weren bis 


n Cheabfbbs ir. * to 3 his Dn 
Ix was certainly a 9 in um- 
1 n ys great me the 


Fed — from his Principles, nor as 
with him in mutual Guiſts. But 


 partaking | 
whatever his ſecret Reſentments were, they 


proceeded ho further, being preventecl hy his 
owh Death, which quickly a after enſued on 
September 3. 166g. a Day which in his Life- 
time he had kept as an anni verſary Feſtival, 
"WERE OS HOI ſuch to 
e N the 


n 


4 ” . * 
1 * 1 n at * 
Nen 2 


en, 
det 


pn 


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r 


ABI TIL > te ets IE 7 
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Wealth. And now having five 
| 16d) Providence, in doing all the 
Miſchief h. left the furpation 
with fo; lrtle Content to to-h 


Con 


Care of the Succeſſion, If © had not been pu 


ere 


ceo! * x 2 9975 * 
N S * 


it; white the 222 9 
Thurloe, diſplacer 


* Toru, o the contrary, ; 


ef. IV. it; 7 1 wood 


2 a Desborow deſort the Intereſt of the 
21. N DS. Protector, 


a 
* 
. 
5 I 
' 
5 
* — 
— 
„ 
24-4 war Sous ” 7 bas 6 * 64 kad 
2 : , 7 irrt a+ gf on noon I en av wrong toes © « WO ww gr eG yy Wy © way to yr ons og er N * 
> 
: n 


WI empower. their. Speaker, 4% 8 
Cummi ſiis in the Army, appointing 4 Com- 
nmittee of Se ven for, the Nomination  0j 

Officers; IX., General Mo! pk's Condutt 4. 
on theſe Alterations... X. £ K ali A 
England tale Advantage "ob them. : 
Hou the King's Affoirs had been. mandged 

ſave t the Death . 


[er IITEV Mon. 41 


Protector, and. fall into. Lambert as 
_ fares..- VI., Tl be, k Protector. tur ved aut. 


VII. fn the, Rump arliament reſtored, 
Reaſons of. t 4 Kae * 


— _ 5 


his F. ather.. "NI The 
 Presbyterians join with. the Regal Ms 5 


n 


their Raine 42 P doing 8. 


. . * 


* 
— 
It aa {3 2 


. E 5 Ny th © protector, Lf the 
Orders for proclaiming his Son, came 


to General ; Monk to Dalkeith much at the 
ſame Time. And preſently after 'Richar; 
Cromwel was, proclaimed at Edi nburgh, bur 
with ſo cold and indifferent Ceremony, both 
in the ,People and Eng/z/h Army, 8 it 
ſeem d rather an Act of Obedience Wh 
feQion, . But to ſettle a better Shea | 
with General Mo ont, the Protector Richard 
ſent preſently 8 iſſary C/arges With Let- 
ders to him, both to e his farther 


. Service, 


is 


01 


rr 4/ cou gy HO, + v4 
— ̃᷑ T2t᷑ĩ HR. LE nn os 


s . 
CT ͥ he A 24, GS Bits 1 geianias- +066 
"= 


n 
ö 


PAP 


. LO We  uran_y 


4 | h 
| | 


x65 


| Prove 


4 thot, be gee 


rere 46,4. 
N * 0 "I 4 24G E Ls 
8 9 bY? 9 * : n 4 


Wy * 1 
1 N , r 
7 \ * . L 
. 5 n V 
9 "2 1 8 
139 W 
W 
N 


L 1 PE of 
with Genel Mink in, thoſe Times, 
aye report ; pi non, that if Oli 
Ver Cr0 we, f could not have 
h Gott {ranch longer; And 
1238 his parry ; on, 1 he pre ently fore. 
Aw, he would not be le to continue bis 
tation mauy Months. Vet he feturn'd hin 
very civil and war Anitvets to his Letters 
Add eatefully ſecuring his own Coiminand, he 
Was 5 { not to concern himſelf with the 
Affiirs. of Enzlan#\ but to leate che young 
| 225 to 1115 Contact” of th ole un him, 

At and BS own haſty Deſtiny. | Ae) 
ll. Tax laſt Protector had. left his So1 
ies $ Go\ yernment; and 
Were x rather Friends to 
his Fe ortune. than himſelf. lle had left the 
Government in ſuch : a miſerable Condition, 
wich is many Debts and rears to Bis Army, 
that his Son was not able to keep open Doo 
an . without the Help of a Parlia. 
173 Which was Converied to fit down J. 
9 nuary the 17%, conſiſting fan Houle of Com- 
mons, and another they ng in thoſe Times, 
the « her Houſe. 15 this Aſfembly there 
were o many rerurn'd of different _— 


Hig 


— 


Bursa Gef 8 tell” reſe 
with other Male-contents, how ro:wreſt:the 


of the leading Perſons was Colonel Z 
whoſe conceal'd Ambition began now wo M. 
cover it ſelf; They had held ſeveral Meetings 
in order to theſe Ends; with ſo much Cere- 
1 e 48 if they had been the heredi 
He Natien; and had ſo ob fool'd 
Pleven and greed and wee bal 


ws too late to retrie e it. Theſe bold 
and open Aſſemblies of the Officers gave 
lome Alarm to the :Coittmons' chen Hiring, 
againſt theſe vent by cheit voting - 
gainſt them, and favouring rather the Intereſt 
of the young Pro oth 


| #aidſt him; Who at laſt ran into ſuch high 
and inſolent Relolves, as the Protector . 


chard was prudently 4 advisd to 
| G 2 7 Perſons, 


"yy ly 10 taballing 


| Government from his Son; of this is Party one 


the 728 ſaw: not — f 


| aberred the Aſſembly of che Army-Officers 


ee * 


— 


Weakneſs and 
Hir hard, aud therefore" inſoleatiy compel 


I" — pe 
% | E 3s - 


- or Sir! drobur HuSletig's: Howl, we iſm wy 
1 : amen be js cherry Thr 


Fi: io 299 SONIA Foo: 


| 3 BS, * 165 1 4 4 m1. e 4 
*% ; , A, Ay i. . $ | 45 we. > a 55 1 2 255 fo : « ; J — 
* 32 Ew 1.8 . N is! 151. 5e mY + 

3 


Tux Officers of the ow ad hitherto 
3 fear cho Jnfluente nd Diſpleaſure of 
Sha Houſe:.of Commons; as they deſpis d the 
Incapacity of their Protectos 


Seſſion, they then 
lly--into- their 
icers that moſt 
Ora te, by y which Altera- 
"$9 e 22 80. of thok 
Stations in the Army: . 5; gerne, 4 

3191026] off 7 See Fs Þ: 97 8 #41441" 
oe. Tg, Proteftor'ss:Relatio 
This While ſo pid Ja ſoul 
did not yet diſaereumbe) had tuin 

| {elves/ and him by this f upon bis 
"Pbwers: Bur, being bl Woled with a Bell " 


44 10 . 124 8 1 


bus 


hows eee diſſolve their wh 
preſt ms ger f "_ W 


Boe of 1 


C 


to whoſeD Diſſblutionb f five: 
them had bean ee net em | 


| 3 and 


Gs xd TE 1 M Ar. 
4 Rattle, they had the Vanity to perſunde 


him, — welbwich hinwond, 


IMmMert:: "Bug? ati me note 


— Sage —— fouhd - 


their Error; when, it was: paſt- Remedy ft 


tho theſe People 1 Who: had maęnify d the 
{s, :a8-therMofes that had led them 


out of the Houſe of Bondage, pf la ſudcden 
took ba 2 Reſolution too ſet up. jd 


„ We 3 of 


had — aſſiſted 2 


cheating the Nation Notwixhſta 


their Ambition or Intereſſ, the religious Hy- 


pocrites were not aſhamed, by their Declara- 
tion _ 6;:to/proclaim:the ame Pepple, che 
Atterters off tha good old Caufe, an 1 
"a ſpecial Preſence of God with 
were bre Welle os; the 
Work. *  2l3-mnoqunt 200 b dT ane 
wines. G 3 Ton V. FLEEr- 


& . 
; 1 WP”. 
fi 6 . 5 
, 
- 9 1 : 
* et oe 4 ; . 
3A | 


5 4 and — — he 


| out of the-Howſe, and expoſing; themigo d 
World as Packaf Knavrs ant} Villains, Nh 

bad ſpent more than ten Mears time there in 

ding them 


former Contempt of them, When it. ſerved 


if 
4 
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3 — — n * * 2 e oo 5 2 2 K * 1 2 ; - 
— — Fr Sts; £m 4s FCC e 3 
eh 8 2 2 * 8.8 ” * 3 
. * 


1 


6 


— lr re- 


the Tolles —— 
te/Pricipice ro-the ucher! They who had 


be TAE: «SG. 


EE Two b aid Dehorito did cat. 
| mn mapa \Diſcoutſ! among them 
ſtoring the late Pärlis 


Aang Her 050 i * — 
0 Kir bur ds — tod Care to ſave 
their own Stake und to fecare-their high 

mands in the Army, by complying with 
| | and the other Officers, leavi mg their 
young Kit 'friendleſs and deſenceleſs to 
the cer and nge of ils: Enemies 


4 the f — of 


inorittuding in 
elame Peopl 
the Aſcent tothe one, became 


that had be 


q lent Outer their Hand to railc 


him up, dee wirh their Feer u 
1 1p eater e P1991 12 ky OTH 95 55 


* a 1 755 
* a 


other kchoney vn which | 
but REY the ole Coiniion-wealth Parlia- 


ad could r not or 51 the Govern- 
IR "REES ment 


7 SENI NAT On. 
ſi. ment by a, military Cou 
m WM bccaule that Conſticucior 
ve ne, which was then CEreme! 
ad the great ones were grown to 
il of Self opinion and Jes 
„chat they could never agree to ſubmit co an 
re ſingle Perſon. choſen from among chemſelves; 


A ky Hez 


— 


a1 nor — they truſt a new Parliamant, which 


was likely _ to declare them Rebels, 


mount their good old Sas 
N Rump of che late Long · Parliament, 
ride Sl * of are en ron 10 


again 1 this 


fi 
* 


* 


14 by „ 


T's a 4 5 1 
5 75 of 7 the lms Los Pa 


ds to chew chat at had 
5 9 — 2 ſecond Ti ime, to a Ca- 


pacity of doing further Miſchief. Xet they 
1 4 250 to 1 their own $ ren 


| by king 
dance 1 


the Army in a more certain De er 
themſelves. And to that Fad, 
70 ts a Comm 
neral, yet. 1 8 955 
others, but 


4%, & # 8 
N + \ fr 
POP ONT Ba oP N 


5 1 0 ns, 


, 
þ wal 
* * e —— as * * 1 
rere 


A 7 


* 


quly of each other, 


There was therefore no other Way but to 


125 


3 , 


I 6.4.” 


"4 IO 
© 
— 


. 64 24 


O e e Wet ty 


ner 


* 9 


em 


8 4, 2 p W 
„ / ˙¹Ü¹L Ku... rogers <1 a uns "2 
Ru e e LIES . 

„„ — 


—— 


Irre 
3 5 Wr 2 2 


22 * xy: — ION 
Say * 8 EY 4 
e 


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=— 
af 
17 
7 
8 
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1 


38 | s e LIFE ah. 


Lieutenant General Klebt 8 


11 
Dr 
* 


* 


+4 


T 


r dns, vis, 
Sir Henry 


— a cherer ve and | 


er , Derhorow, Lathe" 5 aud — with 


1} e model the . W a 


all ſuch Officers . three d 
e „„ wb . 


144 l $1" & $ 


ug IX. — AL Monk fir all this while fl. 


fide in Scotland, keeping a very ſteady Eye 
pon all theſe ſeveral Scenes and Alterations in 
"London. And knowing himſelf to be in a 
Station To confiderable, as they would be en. 


forc'd to make Applications to him, he was 


reſolv d to keep himſelf at a Diſtance, and ſe 


9 


6 | „leaving chem a while 
e their Game At their own Rate. 


B PL ; : ; 
T e Ko Das Dee 111 See 


"Nor did the loyal Patt e sgl“ 
Ale and uncohcern dd Spectators upon 


re it Change of Affeirs: "OMX 0 85 . 2 


W. ar; büt t yet Sen "the « T 

ſever: I Infurretio I and] Parties. 

N the Monarch; Tk A — b 
e Vis gilance of their Enemies, or the Frea- 


80 Jr ſome among themſelves, had beer 
J l fruſtrated, + 


8 


ty > 
* . 
bY 8 2 2 bh 


3 1 
— CRC Sn / 


75018 485 J en *# very \ ſaigular Attention, 
obſerv'd*thoſ&w Mo-Alterariotsand Inconftan- 
of their Enemies 


dies E85 
neſs, by ſo many turnings Arge W 


fore their Fal t the laſt. ff ei at b. ne 


N 5 & 
8 olle W 2.f $39 ke '% * ov „ N % * 2 4 0 * 1 $$ 0 7 
\ 


M. jeſty's- Afr in N Eng 


XI. H 18 
i ace the Death of his-Fart 
naged by a ſecret Conclave aka out of the 
loyal Nobility, and other Perſons: of Honour 
„chat had ſurviv'd the late War 


on the King . Side: Abd were authorized to 


this Employment by a Commiſſion under — 


Majeſty's Hand; as the Earł of Of, Earl 
of Northampton, Sir John Greexvile, now 
Earl of Bath, the 3 More "dart 

the Lord Bellaſts 
lonel of his Majef yrs Grandes Six 2 
Cumpton, late General of the Ordnance, Sir 
Orlando Brie, late Lord Keeper of chi 
zeal, Palmer; latè Attorney 


general, 2 elonel 5 Hliam Legpipane: 1 * 


Gentlemen of his Majeſty 
level Edward Villar s, of Sede nden 


hneſs, "0 Newport, Brother 


1 0 


el e, en 
porting werde vnd 


hoping this their Giddi- 


; 7 
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A ee X. ed Sir Richard 
. who. afterwards fell into Suſpi cion, 
y Þ 


me of theſe | — 
e in 2 Lon 


e for Kis Majeſty: s Sages. | in every 
County of England, and allo to tranſmit to 


— an ; Account nd ings parting 


"aa" XII. e inis Time 
AKoyal Party found a fair nds to in- 
_ darge: tereſt, by the Acceſſion of ſeve. 
al among the more moderate of the Presby- 
© ring again the Tail of the 
late P ar 5: had greatly diſoblig'd that 
Paryy and rhe 3 gy Wc all the Prei- 
mbers as bad as much Right 
ept out by the In · 
va be by the 


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ACRES, 


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Nicholas Monk, rhen in Co 


ES AS SEN Pe . ARE IVY 


05 — the Jancko, 1 


ae, the Con ar a es 
don, for the Diſtharge 9 a hs 
from the King. He recommends Mr. Ni. 
:Fbolas Monk ta the K aug, 45 it Per ſin 
r l ent to the General” in Scotland. 
VIII. The King's Letter to Sir John for 
r purpoſe. IX. The King's Letter to 
| the General X. 2 John acquaints Mr. 
Zornwat, with 
"the K ing's Pleaſure; who" readily accepts 
re Truſt; and immediately. repairs to Lon. 


Wh don 0 Hir John, and Hm rhence ro Scot- 


land. XI. Me. Monk arrivrr in Scot. 
-* Laid; und communicates hir Bu neſs to Dr. 
price, the General Chaplain, «who gives 
him ſome Inſtrutions about the Manage- 


dent of ir. XII. Mr. Monk = Interview 
u and. Neceprion 2 


unn, the General. 
il. n_ © Mmmirice —__ ſeveral Alte 

201 Ay My," Which he 
2 „ whe bj thr zmMPprout 


A! fuſes 9 con es them 
25 rhe rite of thut Ne ſolutiou which he 
Mi " bad laben apon-the. King et Meuse to him. 
* Ar Oath of Serrery. XV. And 1 
gned by the 
Sener and hir Officers; \ * the 
Juncto — commanded. Þ 7 u Up their | 
AY 5 Members 85 


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rg 4s zooth Boca XVII. 7 | 0 | | | | 
he General burns the Decharation. 4 
Tue Juncto and their Army in 1 
England diſagrees. XIX. The Army ſends Kt oY 
to their Brethren in Ireland, and to Gene 
ral Monk in Scotland, fer their Cuncur- ER | 
rence azainſt the Parliament; whereupon = 
— General, Monl | dechares i the, Kerle | ' JR 


2 n 93 
* + 5 As 2 


"ny . undaritogd. Fa to deal wiv 4 5 
— and to make uſe; of their Intereſt; 1 
and therefore having ſirſt agreed, that an uni- | 
verſal Iaſurrection ſhould be made in eyery 2 
County of England, and every one upon the 
lame Day (for which ſeveral Perſons of Qua- on 
liy had undertaken) they conſented, that the ll 
firſt Appeal nce ſhould be of ſuch Perſons on- | Tall 

ly as had not been engag d on the King's Side Wi. 
in the late War; thereby kerne the Wi; 

1 greater Jealouſſ of the — . 
and with Hopes to have 1. Hh wore bf 
moderate Party among the 8 a NGY 4:1 
agreed, allo to a Declaration, "which "hould =! 
Fg ol | „ ud 


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94 


entertain any probable 1. 


. ally 1s 


A 


not mention the King, nor monarchical Go. 

vernment, but only for the Freedom Of Par- 

liaments, according to the known Laws, and 

1 and Property of the 8 And 
rection the firſt a 


xt 2 
7 i as 1 


t chat 8 appear d was Sir George Booth. t 


II. Bur beſides this Deſign oa an whiverſa 
ibibo (which, if it had ſucceeded 
right, had given the Juncto and their Army 
Trouble enough) it was refolv'd by his Maje. 
ſty and his Privy-Council at Bruſſels, tb at. 
tempt the Allegiance of ſome princi ipal Com- 
manders in the 'Englih Army. And that | 
fince it had not the! poſſible 70 deal with 
them while united, to ſee whar good might 


be done by engaging one Party WY the o- 
ther, which was an Exp 


iment that could 
never yet be made. Upon an exact Conſide. 
ration of ſeveral great Officers among them 


all, there was no Perſon of denn hey could 
ope but General 


Monk in Scotland, —— being a Gentleman 


born, and of better Quality than moſt among 


i, and Havitiz formerty been in the Ser 


vice of the late King, nt no way concern d 


t Guilts, might 
be hoop, by the Condition of the Com- 


mand 


* 
- 


GOnndanl Mok. 


maid he held, to be a Perſon very proper for 
ſuch 4 Service as this: Nor v1 thre wane 
ing certain Coriceits and Forebodi 
Minds of Men concerning him. Having t 
fore tefolv'd to make ſome t upon 
kim, the next . 
perſon fit to undertake it. When it eee 
ſonably reme ee 'thar there was a 
near Relation between General Mozk and 
John Gebel, one of: the ſecret” Commif- 
ſoners above: mentioned. And therefore 
there was diſpatch'd to him a particular 
CO to ind out ſome _ of treats 
g ng privately” vith General 
eo is Majeſty's Srvice, 215 WW Eid % av 
Arp becauſe we are here fallen upon the 
mention of a Perſon, that was ſo principally 
concern d in the great Affair we have under 
taken to relate, and made ſo conſiderable a 
E in it, 1 _— TO e, e er 


. 


of the Tikit — loyal Sir Bens — 
of Kelkhampton in Cornaval, Who, at his 

Charge in the Vear 1638. rais'd a Troop 
of Horſe to attend his late Majeſty, in his 
firſt 


was in the Choice of 4 


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EY with lels Obſervation than enen others of 
Party and Principle. 

155 % at ants. {414 742075 wr part 


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VII. AsoUtrn a Vet! after Mr., Mabalar 
Aland was ſottled 18 chis Parſonage at Ke/h- | 


„Sir John Greemuil was oblig d to 
\Countrys and to reſide in ondox. 

| | ilch ge of chat ſecret Truſt, 
of which we have given an Account be 
— receiving the mne before men- b 


ke chid ad 


if — Bruſfale, giving an Ac 

vhat had paſſed between, him and 

Mr. Nicholas Monk, and propos'd him as the 
ſent to his Brother the 

b n eee The Chancellor com- 

| this Better ta his Majeſty, who ſo 


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the- General with ſome Bameſſnals; ken 8 3 
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ge Booth, a 1 his ones who, with 
| er eee bad 


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E all before © th 

ate 3 e „being con- 
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them away, (as vas once pre 
them) and 


| irewdly have weaken'd 
the Royal Intereſt, 1 
of Money f the Payme 
Continuance of their Army, as might have 
1 perpetuated 


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and Vayity,.: as if they bad 
ibu and his Party in the Overthrow at Me- | 


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fought. the ger 
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taunus. But inſtead of purſuing the true Ends | 
of their deſperate Intereſt, they fell to quar- 
relling- among themſelves. The Juncto and 

Aux AY knew ſo much Falſhood and Vil 
tay i ns cacl . F as it Was not poſſ ible for 


| | g their chief Officers from 


Commiſſions, had ſo leſſen d their 
; ond Ipfluence, on the Army, as they 
were teſply d to take the firſt. Opportunity to 
reſtore their military Authority to its former 
Grandeur. And becauſe 2 0 * conceald 
Ambition was moſt Concern dito obyiate thek- 


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the Place of Genetal of the Infantry; 
Jet look'd ſo far into their Reach and De- 


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'Diflike of ith eir Re. 


-ntation, be was reſolv dt —.— own 


"Conſideration within 
f the Stare of the King's Afani, 
the General determines,” for the preſent, 

to [conceal hir Deſign of ſerving him. ll 
: He adviſes bit dogs and Sir Joh 
Fo > Greeavil to conven themſeboes uo more it 
ai,; III. Though he was not it 
lea A with the Prop, al. IV. 


TO nee I Ince ard F a 2 ili. 


1 


2 we 8 v. Mr. Monk: deluruc 70 Lol. 


db, and acquaints dir ohn Greenvil on 
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Opportunity of diſcourſing privately; vich his 
Brother, adviſing. him to follow his Studies 
an J the Care of | his Living and no; more to 
concern himſelf in publi ſineſs ; and that 
ke thould: carry. this, Advice to his Couſin 
Greenv1h, not to 'mcddle an any more in ſuch 


* 


dangerous Adventures; and canjuring 
both to an 8 Sg, he 4 2 75 his Bro: 
ther” Wich ſome F 


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. By all. theſe Paſſag ages the canſiderate 
Lea ader will eaſily Foo , that General Monk 
35 not fo = diſpleas'd. with the Propoſal 
made to bim, as that it fu riz'd him in the 
midſt. o of flo many. unſeaſonable Circumſtances, 
fo that ke principal Care was, firſt ro conceal 
his « own Intentions from others, and next to 
oblig | ge the Secrecy ö | . . oſe that been 


N 


NN 


* ks EY All this while a par- 
ticular. Account, by Letters from London, of 
the Diſc ntents ri en between the Parliament 


and the Army, which were likely to deter: 


mine in 2 doyn-ig ight And bein 
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his Dn he and em boch with a 


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at - Dalkeith: about the 80. of October, intend⸗ 
ing to return the ſame Way he came, and 
r. Price, who, by this long Converſation 
rich him, bad a particular Eſteem for his Per- 
ſon, as well as his. Meſſage, accompanied him 
and his Daughter. to the Shore ar Leith, where 
he took ſhip pping for London , and arrived there 
about four Days after. He firſt found out Sir 
John Ereenvil, 
Whole Account of. his Voyage to his Brother, 
5 and of all that paſs d between them. Affur: 
ing him that, at lea ſor the preſent, nothing 
could be expected from General Monk, with 
whom he had taken an Oath of Secrecy, a- 
bour \ which he was nor to be examin d, but 
. good, Effects of. it would. i in, due. Time 
5 1 0 d now, to haſten 


home 


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General Mont: 


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* Ever 2 the Death of Oliver Crom- 
web, General Monk expected nothing elſe 
an a ſucceſſive Series of extravagant Altera- 
tions in England, which he haped might give 
obliging his Country; 


and therefore m more narrow ly inſpected the 


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yh Then wi N foro d þ 
to fal by different Winds, yet lie ſtill kept 
himſelf ſteady to theſe two Points One was, 
That the Government could not be fupported 
but by an entire Subjettion of the Military 
Power in Obedience to the Civil: The o- 

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ſhould paſs for”; E gland, ro give A 
ita els of. Se; zue, and Hyr were | 


| had no great C — f whe: erions 
commanded them in chief: He had — 
ſent for Captain Mitter of the one, and Caps - 
tain Nobin ſon of the other, being Officers he 
had ſome Confidence in, who were both of 
them with him at Dalleith, when the News 

came of the Interruption upon the Parlia- 
ment. The next Morning cindy he dif: 08. 18 
patch'd them both with Inſtructions ro ſecure 
thoſe two Citadels, with Authority alſo to 
impriſon ſuch Officers or others as ſhould 

diſſent or oppoſe them therein: Which was 
ſome Days after men perform 'd by Cap- 
tain Robinſor at * nen Mitter at 
St. er re ie eee EY 


II. 18 t ag ions Ae Mont, as 
attended-with his Guards at Dalkeith, march- 
ed to 1 1 where were quarter d on- 
ly ewes | legit ems of Foor, e whereof was 

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, «Which be was no 
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The:Cdlonel was then at London, and the 
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in ng up the Goyernment.of of 
Ba, ts 145 0 75 
wellig we me 291 17 


nt his LEO N aan to Mr. 
Scot, who: was a leading Man among them, 1.1 
an. A, N their Council of State; 44 4 
che Officers and Soldiers jd: 


| 14 e with the Ne. 4 
_ WH lution, gf General. In both, Which | {| 
riculars he 900 him very reat Service; 3; 3 — 
ti 0 reſtoring. the Parliament, or | 
und .carneſt in all Diſ- 
with, b IG General and others, chat ſome 
| e of | 


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Geridral| Monk to this —— The Ge. 
8 Suff ns: __ were yp 


ieee n 


Fi te rr © ) aan 22 Jag 


(hem Agovr tis Tine Cop a 
Genetat frem Bertie, who 
ed Colonel Mee im ſettling 


Wy 
8 in Ten e diſpoſe 
— —— Oomph- - 
ſors rang Defgns, and to oppoſe or f. 
cure ſüich Pefſons as d diſſented; 
and active Man, and of very great Intereſl in 
the Army. 80 ſoon as he came to Berwich 


* e f 
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fit & 


. 
wap 456,07 3 S — - 444948 & 


dei tor lay ew Ht and "ap 
an had him Priſonerf 


| Seelen tof that · Garri fon) 82K. 
| they were all ſeeur'diin the 


Cuſtle c 5 lf, het ods en 
ait 7 wank 01 Hl: rol aft * rr * Boyi ad | 
VIII. GN rRNA Mok! was well: pleasd 
with this Service of Major Jobnſonm in pre- 
ſerving a Place ſo important to his further De- 
7 and: 1 * ſecuring ſo dangerous ſin 


Partie in the * 
— to \ Size coe Genen himſelf if be did 
tot cbmplyt with their Actions. This Deſign 
upon him; befote they could poſſibly know 
any ching of his diſſenting, did greatly pro- 
voke the General, both againſt d — 
tbeir Officers at Londum, and-their Inſtrument 
— Beſides ſome. hee, vaude bar A 


4 : 
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— «a7 
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the: Army i but bin g beix anew: N 


ad * tber ct Lachen bad 


5 (94 ne0eive, any | K ligation of 
from thoſe hei ag reſoly d to quar· 


rel with, Vet. be reſented the Iadignity, being 
0 Affronts that were 


q as, he an farce to ember 


i 22 herd. , „ d plot ljd 


| 4d. $3 Þy 1 A0 K 1 4: ce gte . 
Tus General being by ati ime 955 
ug aud ſoonring do many . — Bennet 
and Reg E 
rated bm und his: 2ouncil of Officers, to 
— che An. an Account of this their pro- 
5 3 The Sub- 


Hale 0 of e wy 20! 3 
the wag Liberties, of the People & 


Perſe: chugngh.Socand and Re, 5 
1 Wee D* UT 


* * * ; 72 of * 


5 3 wor ours hp 51 6 een 8 C 
7 : : 8 5 . 


ds end Prout —.— bo of ch: Ar- 


1 „ They who beſt ated the 


— ofithe Army in Scotland, did greatly 
diſlike the: a z but, in cheir Preſcut 
„it was not ſafe to decline it 


Method, 50 much to the Diſcontent or Suſpie 
cion of thoſe who were Authors of it. Let- 
ters therefore. were agreed. to. be drawn up to 


= expaſinlaing a their V/ iolence to — Par- 


liament, Aena his own, and the unanimous 
Keſolution of the Army under his Command, 
to aſſert their Authority. At the ſame Time 
other Letters ere alſo written to Mr. Lent- 
Hall, the Speaker of the late Parliament, to 
acquaint him; that if the Interruption did 
| ue, he ſhould: be ready with his Ara 
| to reſtore them to their Seſſion, accordii 

the Duty of his Place. And becauſe 2 
of his. 0 Officers chat adher'd to him, were 
> Werben of, Þ Independent: Congregations: in 
8 England, 


— 
, In 
neon 93 **. 


— 


” - : U * — 
- a 
— „„ 


.. ͤ 11K aidtll td weou A onion 1 er rs reg, W ee 
15 5 , . — Wat 6 ; n - * * 1 2 2 
— 4 - . 5 4 „ - MIS. he * —_ 3 * 


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>» ; —— — 2 

— . 5 * 
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— 


— 


Jo — nr — — . — 
pow - 1 — * x 


ment; 15 fm whom he receiwd a very cold 


n 


eie, Gontention wh 


;þ is Authority of Parkin 
7 1 


* 5 W. 1 Kun As 


ic by the Acceſſior t Fother remote 
Correſpohdentics. ' To that End he wrote 
Letters to the Forces in Ir lanu, repreſenting 
the juſtneis and Neceſſit enn, Proceedings 
againiſt the Eugliſh Arm d defiring their 
Aſſiſtatice with him in ae he Parla- 


und diſſenting Anſwer. XII. Ar 


GERNE AL Monk. 139 


3 —— — 


might; alda Ont — ©, 


Admin! in cha fortmnattes War und 
Duteh, and had deſt them with an extraordi- 
vary, er e hig \ Efticnation af bis l. 


Aan had bete Mund; by cheir Agents, — 4 
his Buſineſs: ſo» effectnally, by 


his Jurentions;) that the Pes was reſolyd ito 
ſtand off, till chey — 22 


the 3 bis Defigr 

in e — content to become 

Interceſſors between him and the Engliſb Of- 

ficers) for an Agreement; but would not o- 
ebe concer n een 


7 enen FF" n Fs. "1 01.509 " wy CRIT. , TY 


XIII No Man, ex 


aud xreſolate in the midſt of ſo many croſs 
Actidents, which took him in the very Be- 
; eie of his Deſigns. But being only to 
form his own into an exact Obedience 
e ho was e een 


— Cre 


except Genmab Monk, 
could happily! have kept his Thoughts ſteady 


| | could 


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1. Le. Peck. e 4 | 
422 4 rear eee II. 


el Lilbun, IV. I hich. prov. 
vd an dduantage to the General. V. Com. 
mi ſſary Clargs s and Colonel, T Ibor 
4. Edenburgh. 8 Commiſſary Clarges 
p ribately in forms the Generah, F the ill 
Condition of thoſe who ſent him; however, 
to gain Tune for bringing, together. his di. 
— Farcec, VII. The Genera c Fo 


'% Treaty between : HhegP mies, and 
— . err. VIII. Cie. bis 


4% , Paste at 
4 e bone e 2 


FI 


a v, i the 
Any Agreement” XII. 1 
4 e. 7⁰ General . 5 Fog Gene- 


Lord Fairfax! 8 meets Gerthad: XIV. F leer- 

wood alſo writes privately a civil Letter 

10 the General. XV. A Letter of Thanks - 
Fm the et Kr — mn 
London , vhe Genere arri 


— NIX. 
ee ene — of Off. 
br fer B. recefving. and" diſpatching 
dee, W ; TIN = | 
£53.47. Wa een PIO pe ak MILAN Ney e le e 
5 ber 28 his Mef ae Oda. 28 
1 rivet with the Bette en "London, 
which had all of them the very ſame Effect 

that General Monſ expected. For the Juno 


were re thereupon" coritriving to make' Parties: n 
the 


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wy pn 10 "Gather: >Convulratinan? it ovas my 
ſoly'd-to-attemipt him by a Treaty z in Hopes 
to bring off the. General himſelf, or at leaſt 
ie of his Offtcers; ta unit with them 
beheben they oc. 28 
miſfary, Age hides ol 


Fee pI _ in: {4 it6-t1a "I 
Where they inform!drhem,. that rhey had re 
ceiy cd Letters km General 2 a5 which 


bs: Older they. commanded rhem borh r 
halten heir: 


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11 Bur tai bang theſt Ge W in pre- 
einct of their hafty Journey, we will paſs be. 
fore them again 12 the North, where we 
all find ( I Mozk buſied in the further 
modelling of his" Army: And becauſe he | 
would have Paſſes enough for his own Mo. 
tions, or for the Acceſſion" of fiich Parties as 


| he hop'd might riſe for him i in England, he 


1 * br 


grand Avennes 


Was refoly'd to ſecure the to 
into Srot land. To that End he had before 


ſent Major Dean with 1 Parry of Horſe to 
ſecure Carliſle, „who faild in the Attempt 

And had now commanded Colonel Knight 
With four Troops of Horſe, and Major Mil- 
ter with ſix" Foot Companies, to ſurprize 
Newcaſtle But having matched as far as 
Morpeth, they receiy d 1 that Co- 
lonel Lilburn had f revent d their Deſign up- 
on Newcaſtle; and bad already entercd the 
Town with a Party, "efolving to keep it for 
the Committee of Safety. This pern was 
quarter d at Tor, and fo ſoon as he heard of 


General Monk's Proceedings in Scotland, was 
very 


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diſpatch'd, Des to Clone, Knight and Ma- 
1 Muller, to proceed no further; but, for 


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Treaty chuld produce noa good, nor did he in- | 
J tend i ſhould.” But becauſe his own Officers 


17 
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TRY 1:7 ___ might 


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af-A-jnew_ one 
ple. or Gene- 
— — was no 
ſins ud not bring tho 
0, aFKn Lie ſome. Autho- 
4 — — o fubm uit 104 Parliament 
. chalen, DE qe be ſure to 8 
be ſhauld then neh. want Op- 
VS Jater to AK 5 himſelf cheir 
March, He. was o Stoning old in Ar- 
| | mow) 


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Aiſant! N Ae on | 
A © —— „ bb adr at 
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* * 
8 


Test succefs in "Cheſhire four 
Months befbre, h d rais'd in them Rich” an 
extrabrdinary Vanity . re chat 
they did Hot cohſider rhe 
counter another ſort df Wärfire, und able 


Und of General. L3 XI. Major 


Wy uy rr rar * e 


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the the Juticto) could leaſt of all aſſene to, and 
was-ecſolv'd nt ruun and cherefore Pretend 


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ben, off e 505 


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bert found Major General "Morgan, 0 Lo 305 


from TRY Fir of the Gour, by 
A 12 which 


ml to an Agreement, or to draw; af a, zgod 
Part of. his Amy from him The naxt Day 
> he began, his 4 © 


7 bring ome nb Days Nov. 8 
mary. (den gen and t 
on, ag beam, he Ro 


reſtored. agaid be — 5 no. further Quanel; Un 


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tant Suit b, 0 march to the-ſeycral: /Horke 
| gende e accord 


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fett dhe 5 


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der, e \rh6rghe Hr; fe end . 


to General "Mower by a 8 of 
bis own. Before this Tame ne Bad entertain d 
{ome Apptehen | 


fc wa Proc f 


—— was Tt 


4 * | 
— Abbe to Cb wiate or be A 
he-Peſigrs'6f che other. To this End he 
ſent dowa My. an WhO Wag onè of the 
 Trenſhrers'6Pirhe' Army; "with "ery! kind 

| to General Monk which 
though they came to no Effect, yet che Ge- 
— diſcerhid all was not right among 
rhemſelyves This Weſſenger's Bemeanòur 
and Action in __ was very much refent- 
W in the Army. - For in his Way through 


their | 


— — —— —̃ 


caſfier d a lol bas "quad wy 5 NY 


a | 


» 
I Rr os I o W-. .]-. 


from che Obel 
1 ie. Head · Quarter — the ln 
| | E FALK” — binge his OWN | 
f | Table | harp, nl with Deſipns of intro- 


x urin, did not de- 
0 ready made 
oy y would: — 


. Pe nods abt res, 


Nn 


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. * Pe 


te 

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1 ed the Treaty, Commiſſaty — and Co- 
| lonel 744 g recei d their Inſtructions, 
V return d back for van. i But the one fell 


$9 FEY 1 E er ui e. th e 


F into 


1 | 


—— 


Account of e bn, and declaring for 


. as \ they thought themſelves 
him Thanks by Malfa 


e aer Wale "reſolv'd, > Ra 
Oppc denn t bee ac ee if Se- 


us to draw off er own party there to a | 


EE Wirk ehe e in London. ' 
Fe 78 AY ne d 9360), r S 6 0 51 1 heb 

"YE? 
610 pater &f their On 


8 


ploymenr were choſen 


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rwo 

m5 £90 os og 9 
Siſe u upon io the Sinton Officer ers, 2d bc 
a 5 Mr. ' Hatumiond, were hos accusd 
. bye al yer ery ill Contrivances during their 
ther „ Her aſter ſeyeral Conferen. 

d rather incenſe the Genera, 
n; {2.7 gave them 


þ Reaſons for his Relohurion to oppoſe the 
25 any that the eg of Tnde- 
ave of rh hoping 


nite in —— the ae it in Londi, 
which Ae. could n e ar Eden: 


f 8 4 ba 
j i 1 Ker Ch f 
+3 4 £5 Suri 50% 4.5 kd. gu, $f nf * 4 15 5 Walz 5 It. ; 42 . 23 x 


82 6 Beit” At bah "ro 180er 
dip d theſe Irm portunitie 8 upon him from 


abfoad, d, but he wa: is encounter With new Di. 
"OL „ fiturbances 


Cad 


2 ” : j . ' 


Minn 


me inne 
2 „enn 
153 X | Su 
$1 e 


Re 1 5 OV 
tlat the, Gene eral /\ 


* 


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. 


their Departure 2 N | 991 


5 


N N ah 4 present 1 
where they Were neiclier to 1975 nor to return 
9 he Peril o f cheir Heads : 435 for 
heir Arrears, they were to: ſtare them with 

Maſters whither they e 4e 
_ refoly dh ev. ſhould not be enabled to 


2 5 


a 


* 


& * 4 


n him with his own Money, to the 
ä Prejudice, of the ether. Part, of. his Army. thar 


. 


RATE "a 7 $4 8 % * age nd p 147 8 


; 


XVIII. Bur to 2 the Nee of his 
Soldiers for further Practices upon them, and 
to ſpirit them againſt. the Army in England, 
there, was pe Care taken in the placing 


2 FITTED 


ſuch Serjeants and Corporals over them, as 


„ 3g * 


* LT 


„ | were 


* 


— ́à . OL ion aEcLings a Mes 99 OR Yet 2 84 „ ee ee 


— — 


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4 


eee eee e te, on 


— W wy a 
- 


aſeallt es Sper] to 
en 


pg d and e. 
other of the 7 All which were uſually 


{ho * * by ids! Nv Sgt 5 NN A1 3 Ws» 2 


XN. Taz General in ub chis Time 


beſieg d with ſo many Letters and continua 
Meſſages-to him' from the general 1 
Oſſſeers In London, and another 

ouncil'ar Dublin, andꝭ a third at eee 
thar, beſides the ſtanding general Council of 
all Commiſſion Officers in the Army, he con- 

itn &d * Committee of principal Command 

rs, to which: were added ſome Perſons of e. 
ſpecial Prudence and Truſt, wWhe 


92 44 


i aid ſuch 


againſt fach Time as he was 
ce ho mi 5405 03 ba ie Fart: 
ent e \ NN 


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I. Genera! Monk C unk rf arri de 

London, and come" bo . 7 
theſe af bb E. gn | 


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furpriz 2 2 che News of this Are. 
ment. III. Aud refuſes 


5 rer bee \called v, Geng f Officers, 


" heir Diftike- of 16 : 
Zetren tes ſent" to Fleet 
— 4 an Enplanation 07 
biolar IV. Then be marc her back from 
Edenburgh Heddington; Theme: fo Dun- 
bar, nd H ,Ed up his | Quart 
wick. VI. anne of the Generale: Hing 
deſert to t, gan off 
<1 Newealllec: 5 e | General's | Letters 
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4 4 Pe 
& 12 A 0 70 A. 's S730 8 A 
. EI ICE LOR ok ty YL, Tis AA bags, 24, : A we 
) PS LANE SF i I I. Noe: 09.53 — 
: 
' I ! 


{bes rel 1¹ Fi. 


| 1A 'Trekind;” ro hrung him into 


774 p 7 
. 75 24 A 'F las V 
2 p 1 ** 


Pat! 
4 


Sri Merch Landen. 


TY f ren ect 
XIV. Which be was oblig'd 76 4 
name. XV. Mare & es to him af dt. 
Fleetwood it order a, with 
mu, th march 
#9 come up! XVIII. 

On 


} 
. 


— — —„— ᷣ 


1 * 9; wee 4 


— 
—— — — . 


a, 


— hg N 
—— — — 
- 4 


r — — 0 


— — . — —E————ů— ́34äᷓ—eↄ . * 


4 
1 
1 
i 
: 4 
9 


22. a * 
L 1 


—ͤ— 
, 


52 


4 > 
1 1 
75 


Mute 
Bt. 
. 


al a advanced 
eiv d Infor- 


3 7 
* x 


bs . his Forces 


+ 
1 


by and were re⸗ 
his Lordihip, being 
t, 1 85 Yn to his 
. From thence he 
. (who 


ohh 5 
. d þ 4 
- i . if A, 4 We „ 4 f . 
SS 76. ih; "& # X: - 
BT A WOE F LS TEITIM0 
* * * „ G3 3 - 
\ 5 of) 
M 7 * 2 1 3 ö ; 
* * ub ; 5 * © 
3d *. | * + 4 


9 : 
*: 3 4 z 
+ 
; 
1 * 
48 } 246 
* 


My where 
the 


* 
5 7 Mage gow _— - how 2 
; DE — — a . N R * * rr ee e e e * 


wt [ob Ae 
1 Tonk, Vene be tc bis 
8 for > & e Day? A». Ang, 4 bo oF | 
mod Wa and 2 Lp füch FL 
found in the Com, that” had r ro 
Lambert; 0 ve 
to 1 Lal 's 


13.10 


Lo Fi 15 e Sls i 1 is St 
here Ie e da Viſit from 821 L My $574 a 
fax, with whom h he had mich ſe ſeeretDiſeurle, 
85 | ndt tog 7575 1 Mo = Ge encfal's 
amb 


* 1 


rs 555 5 A pet. 1 15 me Nigh 
# les; Was "Chaplair and 4 lh \r 
wh ord "7 4 8 Was directed by bis 


. Loni to, confer with the General, 161 Was 
Privately ich tin eil after Nen gde, . 
; p ens to hi i the Indlination of the Cor 2 | 
ty, and the fore thir ond be n Read. 
webs to Join en n if he would tay wirh 
| them there,” and at © Tork ect for tlie Ring 
"= But 


3 


ö 


25.5 po ”Y 
—— — ——— —-——— —— — CE —ü ö—̃ũ ——D— a Alf — if 
1 * : 2 77 
0 F * 


„ * 0 * — ee ade er ae ths 
— — wy AN, oe bonds 4 there eo rh er tne 1 — 9, ages ap <4 


— — r 8 


| Night return d n to W uarte 


Saſety. Nor could t 


thoſe he had 


10 The s 1 E. Pl * 


uch vg — aun al ite | 
eee res re as dn}. 


be pt 4 Viſio ahe Lo r Fax at his 
Houſe at Namn 1 — himſelf with 
ſeveral of his Officers and Retinue were very 
ficently entertain dat Dinner, and 4 


i. Hrras: fare, the General had march 


flream to 2 Wy by bis Own {c le Authority 
and Diſcretion; but here he receiv'd Orders 
from the Juncto, to keep on his Way to Lon 
dan. They had taken no Satisſuction at the 


Lord Fair far his Appearance in-7ork/hire, 
though he hadiprefacd his Actions with Au- 
thority of Parliament, being very well aſſurd 
that he had other Deſigns H it beyond theit 
hey be plens id with Ge- 
neral Mont's Stay im that Coumty, where he 
might probably receive other Impreſſions than 
ought otit of Scotland. And 

the: 9 n. ſuch Perſons 1 them, 
: 9 


f Y 1 . A L +79 * 
Rn , ̃ ˙ . —˖0 ce Wore eg pony ry Oe ge als 44a me 


7 0g 7 


| Gungnas Mons. 207 | 
1 ane 15 5 1 Generals in the Nation) 1 | 


might, haye g em \apother; kind of Dir 


107 Lam 46 | "They had tuffer 4 1 4 
adv ce Far, that now they could £ | 
not decently command, bim back into . | | 
land, withour ſo1 ne Diſablig upon the | | 


e: ation 
General, and Jealouly in bis Army. Nor 
were 232 1 in Ds early Jubqiſüan 2 


ein doe 1 Bs 70 = | "wy 4; 
FB 6 21 ral 5 eh Melisse 
over Fa * his Agents, that he very well 
knew. where the Shoe pinch d. He had al- 
ready caned one of his Officers here, who 
entu 'd-t6 ay: General Monk will- 
el in the King upon us; and, to re- 
all Umbragi and Apprehenſion from a- 
mong chem, he reſgly d here to leſſen his Ar- . 
my, and tom 7ork. ſent back Major General 1 
Morgan to take che, Care of Scoc laud, acm. 
 pany'd. with two Regiments of Horſe and 
Foot. He haf d the beſt Meaus in v his: 
Power to.ſecure/that Nation before-he-left it; | 
was dee eee aſſur di * the buſy Hu- 


mou 


” 
<4CY * * a 
_— 148 r 
1 ee . 

* 4 t 
6 * eren 3 g N j . 
N een gn ted. de. E . 0 . 
. 3 *. q i 6 K on ry Wenner Rs ee Rn ET FO PI Rr EH rs Ye Ho gr nes ae pr te repre eo Sr wt 


: 
l 


IO — ” — ——— = 


chiefly ro. Keep er 14 4.85 


himſelf, ir be he bapp 
i ee, e e 


Jan. 18 field 10 Noztin, nghamſbire, % [ 


"Seotland, was | 
4 Uliderable Re- 
ſerve, in Caſe the. G nera "Mould have need 
of them, or, to which he might have retreated 
pp 1 to fake a Bartel 


114 


r ; FORT 
under the. Command of Colonel Fairfax; 
who, being a Native of this County, and 
very well ald and eftcem'd among them, 
was the moſt proper Perſon. to be entruſted 
with the Care of the City, and the Safety of 
the County. And how h 4 Ving reduc'd his 
Army to . thouſand Fe dot, and one thou 


N Huki E 1 be 121 WR 1 ir 


- fand eight hundred Horſe, | he went out of 
Dork about January 16. and march d through. 


the reſt of the County till he came to Manſ: 
2 18. 


VI. TL this Stage hisMefſſeny er, D. Cum 


Ble, whons he had diſpatch'd away from New 
Caſtle to London, came back to him aftc! 


three Days Stay in the City, and gave him a 
particular Account of his Meſſ: age: That he 
deliver'd all his Letters according to his In- 


ſtructions; hat he bad been _ ſtrictly ex· 


amin q 


Oath of \Abjurarion;/ they ö 
be very erneſt n r eee 157 


Reſerve ane in hs E Kit which 


confttm d by the confident Expedtarion, 7 


his 1 chen amar kin wich 
the Diviſien in the Council, between thoſe 
who had taken the Oath of Abjuration; and 
were bis profeſs q Enemies, and others that 


had refuſed it; and bad ſore Confidence that 


General. e enge nominared 4 Member 
5 neil, (v f rm” 


nnd him: — Mare ds and; Robiſon, 
two Members of the Parliament, and of the 
Council of State, were upon the Road to 
meet him: That they were ſent as Bſpials 
upon his Actions, and the Temper of his Ar- 
my; and that; having themſelves taken the 
woulck preſentij 


N 4 * Hay rc” "IR Ee 1 * it icy | 4 Ly ; * 47 


Yu. kn ont d 


Df General 


the next Day * 1 


* — Dt 
5 7. 
2 [ES : 
— » — 
C a3 1 9 POET" 
* 2 5 
— — St <. ths 1 * 5 1 
— — — —— 
„4 2 —— A 3 my 
vg * 5, *%%, Pot gt 
* 4 "8 
o Y 


Commiſſar 
ſten d down to him, with a further Account 


210 The 14 7 7 2 5 F 
General advanc'd to Nottingham, Where he 

Was ſeaſonably met the Day * by 
Clas ges, who had privately ha. 


of the Affairs in Ion dam and We/imin/ter, and 
what Hopes or Jealouſies were entertain d 


concerning him amongithe different Intereſts 
and Parties He informd him, that the 


Fotcees then in the City Wer much greater 


than his own, and commanded by ſuch Ofi- 
cers as were {0am Enemies £0 hae, except 


vm. 8 che 8 had 0 


all his Buſineſs into ſo good a Poſture, that 
no his next and £ 


greateſt Concernment was 
to ſhit Fleet cs Army handſomely out 
of the City, and (without Impediment or 
Jealouſy) to bring his own in. To this End, 


before 5 Arrival of Seer and. Robinſon, be 


enter d into a Conſultation with ſuch Perſons 


him as he could beſt truſt: Where it 


Was reſoly dz chat a Letter ſhould: be draws 


up to che Pe liame giving them an Account 
of his March, and the Number of his Forces 
with him; and becauſe thole Regiments no 


in the City, had ſo lately been in Rebellion 
_ the as and were not yereh 


tirely 


; — 
[IR bad Virttt 


Cen Monk. Bed 
tirely fertſed-and reiuced, he was very un- . 
| willing! his qwn dutiful and orderly Forces 
| ſhould mix ee: with them. He there- 

; hem (for theit own Safety) _ 
tht! choſh e under Fleetwood ſhould be 
remoy'd to diſtant Quartets in the Country, 
except the two Regiments of Colonel ' Mor 
ey and Colonel Fugg, who had contind d in 
their Dury to chem, which, with hig owt 
Army, would be ſufficient to maintain che 
Guards to the Parliament, and ſecure the City. 
But this Letter was not thought ſeaſonable to 
be ſent till they were advanc d near to Low- 
aon; ſo that they ſhould not dare to deny 


him, unn; Tim . F to 9 his : 

maß Hh . my 

1 h T 4 Jy f y © | | 
IX. Tur Scheit 1 Welhg gd ar ring: n 


bia two Days for the Rear of his Army to 
come up to him, on "Monday, Fanuary 22.7. 2a, 


$ marched to Leiceſter, and met Scot and Ro- : 
t binfon on their Way towards him. Much | | 
Ceremony and Submiſſion was here render d 1 


by the General and his Army towards theſe 


$ two artogant es of the Juncto: 

N lnſomuch thar the General, who had quickiy E310 

4 Uken the Meaſures of that their Stay in the 1 

6 998 was fo punctual chat his Soldiers were 
| * Z | 


"PI dr og gf wot Putters 15 NES ng 5s oi, 


obligts/-upol on alf Occui 


r 
4 


m e LITE N 


e than had been us'd towards 


— 1 


11 


and Robinſon had much Conference: with the 


General upon the late 'Alterations; and the 
preſent State of Things: And much of their 


Diſcourſe was full of Apprebenſton and Jea- 


louly of every body about them, which fur 
ther confim d the General, that himſelf Was 
nor free from their Suſpicions. They reflect. 
on the late Practice of Fleet uood and 

ambert with a very particular Indignation. 
They fell foul on the City of London, for 
their late Stubbornneſs and Malignancy. And 


though the Army in Ireland had declar d 


their Obedience to the Authority of Parli 


ment, yet they very well mig 60 ny were 
not __ . n Beste D | 


X. Pa E *Gontrat tea; now: more cronbled 


how to temporize with theſe two Commil: 
ſioners, than ever he had been how to oppoſe 
all. Lambert's Army. But becauſe his grand 


Deſign was now upon tlie Anvil, for the re- 
moving of Fleerwwood's Army out of Londn, 


and the introducing his own, without which 


all his Travel Ritherto would be löſt, he was 


5 e Ting ſo far to with their Extravs 


gancies 


'F 


onA Menn. 213 


of kun 
EY e 4 Te | 2; ; 4 | 
lured him, being drawn abe by Colonel Reg- 


nan and Colonel Brett; c of whoſe Fidelity 


he was aſſur d, when they were in Lambert's 
Army, and therefore receiv d them with a 
mn ende n 1 * o 1 255 5 75 = 4 


8 


XII. Enron 8 pro next | on he 3 
went to his next Stage at Harborough ; ; where 


he met three Commiſſioners, (whereof two 
were Aldermen) ſent to him from London, to 


renew the Contents of their former Letter ar 


Morpeth, wherein they deſir d a new Parlia- 
ment, or the filling up this preſent one, by 
reſtoring the Members ſecluded in 1648. and 

compleating it by new Elections. Theſe Gen- 
tlemen deliver d their Meſſage with ſuch Free- 
dom and Reſolution, as greatly incens d the 
two Commiſſioners; inſomuch as Scot told 
them, That the Parliament had already, by 
| their Vate, determin d againſt the ſecluded 
Members; ſo that it was 4 Preſumption in 
any private Perſon to mention their Admi ie 
Jon, The General yery well knew that, for 


de Preſent, it Was as much the Citizens In- 
P 3 "oy tereſt, 


45 ta ae ores an e entire a er 


—— — 4 * 3 


- * 2 — 


11 l 3 IFR 


teteſtʒ us his G Nπνε⁰ eomply: 1 h the Parlin. 
| ment's Commiſſioners, againſt them, and ſ6 
ſent them away diſſatisfy d: Though after. 
ward me of *thoſe Perſons that attended 
tte General, took the Opportunity of giving 
them Parte ye 2 berter nen, 
| in U * 2 1 04 1 3823 
14 2s £ van Tur nent Memiög Geüretal Int 
ſet forward for Nort hamptub, whtre he met 
more Addrefſes from the Gentry of the Coun- 
ff, for the filling up the Parliament, or call. 
ing à hew one. Bur che cold Entertainment 
Which the Meſſengers from Zowdor had re. 
cei vd the Day before at #7arburongh, did 
ſbemer hat diſcouroge them in preſenting their 
Petition; till Hr. Hamutiu, a fome other 
Gentlemen about the General! advis'd them 
to go on with then Addreſs, and to be con- 
cen with ſuch Atſwer 4s) we F recely'd, in 


SITY Fo deu —_ peeplay 
böw to. awer cel a ropes Addreſſes, be- 
ing very well ſatisfy'd in che Reaſdn aud k- 
quity of thoſe that Brought them. But Ser 
and Rol in ſon esd Hith of chat Cate; for they 
tifidertook to anſwer l Com 95 Aeaving Ge- 


TR Monk to the Sid of - his own 
| Silence, 


G 


CEA Mei ET 215 : ih 
silence, who never loved to make long | 
hes, nor to hear them from others. But # 


hen bs he was fore (in Compliance wich he 


xv. Fro wha Suggs Jeneral kep 
his March to Dunftable, January 27. an Sim: 2 
the next Day arriv'd at St. Albans; where he Jan 28 
was again beſieg d with numerous Addrefſes 
from ſeveral- other Counties of - England, a. 
groeing all in the ſam Applieations, for the 
reſtoring the ſecluded Members, er the call- 
ing à new Parliament. - Sror and Robinſon | 
had, all the Way frow L rcefter to St. A. 
bans, taken up aue Quarters in the ſame 
_ Houſe with him ; and! when they withdrew 
from him to cheit own Apartment, they al- 
ways found or made ſome Hole in the Door 
or Wall; to look in or liſten, (which they had 
practis d ſo palpably, that the General found 
it out, and took notice of it to thoſe abour 
him, reflecting on theix Baſeneſs and evil Suſ⸗ 
picions) that they might more nearly ſpe 
"6 Actions, and obſerve what Perſons came 
TEE to 


. 
2 
g 
} 
? 
5 
s HK: 
F 


to. SAT and "Y 10 FRY ee to anſwer 
the Addreſſes, and to ruffle with thoſe that 
brought them. But here they were fo plain. 
ly and ſeverely reprimanded * thoſe Gentle. 
men that came, that Scot, in great Fen 
reply d: Though his Age might gxenſe him 
from taking up Arms; yet, as ad as he ws 
(before this preſent. Partiament. 


entangled, by reſtoring the ſeckided Mem. 
bers, - OF. by. ne Elettions) 
on his Sword. ras and oF me 4 
| gainft them. 


e would. gird 


* : ; 
* e 1 0 7 


AMONG: ahe, reſt of his Inte rrupt 
this Baer. he was troubled. e Faſt: 

n Hugh Peter. And now being 
Wed twenty Miles of be: City, it was 
thought: fit to ſend away thoſe Letters to the 


| 0 for the Removal of Fleetuaods 


Army ou of London, which, wp gave an Ac- 
It. was 2. 5 laſt — viceſ Part rhe. ee 


had to accompliſh, . in clearing. the City of 


W Rs 4 1cnts . BAD, ** own En- 


n To. this End EY 1 fry 


G 3 


2 was ſent away from hence, to prepare ſuch | 


Members of the .J 1 as he could engage 


9 


| 05 


to further the e Vote zl . Fg Lidcot w was 
pitch d upon to carty the Letters, being the 
Speaker's Kinſman, and particularly elteem'd 
by him. rot alſo: and Robznfor had, in their 
frequent. Letters to their Conſidents in the 
Houſe, g ive ſo fair a Character of the Gene- 
ral, As . of the Diſcipline and. Temper of his 
Army, that, in Concluſion, the Tate a or 
for Fleetwood's Forces to retire into new 
Quarters. in the Country, except the two 
Regiments of Morley and Fagg; tho there 
were ſome that would _— half of Fleetwood's 

| Forces remain in the City, and bur half of 
General Menk's admitted. 2 10 Viet wer 


94 


XVn. Hz RE : the General das Halt of 
fre. Days, both for the bringing up his own 
Forces nearer . together; ſome whereof, for 1 
the Eaſe of the Country, had march'd in the 14 
other Road by Newark; and alſo to receive ol 
the Refolurions of the Parliament. by Colonel ET: 
Lidcor, and for the diſtributing the Quarters 
2 London n the eee for * own 


I "4 7 * 


Xvi. Ann. _—_ 1 ee 5 = Feb. 2. 
arnet, which were his laſt {Qua 
a ters 


march d to 


me e And — two evi 
and Robin ſon „that had never faibd to quartet 
with bim — the ſame Houſe from Leiceſte- 
to this Stage, tow r. _ to take 0 His 


pay Gly” for the, A en 
| they might very well do, * Song ſons 
| en See reh Money ill im the wg 


C13 0007 


N Th Gehieral Seeg W aged fo nen, 
the Juncto were in the mean whiſe very buly 

in diſpatchi ing Fieeteuobd's Forces out of the 
_ which” his did, not only to oblige 


farice of their Contempt 
aid Som of thoſe Regiments for their late 
| Defection, eſteeming them as unworthy to 
have Quarters in the capiral City Vet 


ct the common ons might be Tet | 
| march 


1 a en e toqu 


| E 4.6 i { þ * 5 « 4 
3 5 7 * N 5 1 3 4 4 * #73 * . 2 J. * . 
- 5 1 3 5 38 = IS 54 75 * : 4 2 * 
% * — 
AY 


nt g align +11 19 25 ien 


XXI. vow _ + Regiments being. 1. 


to ext E 
for worke — n Entertai An 
ountry, und ſtomach d the Diſprace of the 
Nauoter ! Informch that ſome of 3 
: adam bigats A in che Suburbs; and at 
the dame n 4 wee -of e 


Irums . e Ot, 
enraged and mittivous Soldiers vould © 
wich them. The Counc 
ting, were 10 alarm'd- with the Diſorders of 
this Night u che City, together: with the 
Apprebenſion of the further Miſchiefs Which 
might happetſiin' this unquiet Puſture 

fairs, that, late in the Night, they diſparch's 
away Meflengers to Stot and Robinſon, in 


_ tix General's Quarters ar Barner, defiring 


them td haſten his March into the City, for 
Prevention of further Miſchief. Mr. Scot was 
lo 5 out * his * with this haſty 

Nes, 


ci of State, aden fie | 


—— — 0 wh 


ee 


8 * o 
ws # 


1 
7 


The 277 of 


2 20 


| . he Diſhabic of his Nigh 
: wes Slippers, hurry'd preſently to the Gene- 


C — — 


ral's Quarters, where he made a terrible Re- 


neaſcnantion- of this Mutiny in the City, re- 


quiring General Mont to beat his Drums in- 


ſtautly, and march forward. But the Gene- 


ral, that did not uſe to be alarm'd with every 
little Noiſe, or put out of his Temper by an 


baſty Tale, return d him an Anſwer «Hyg 


ded Mr. Scot to return to his Bed, 


and «ay his. Fears under his Pillow: That he 


was ſo near the City, that no great Miſchief 
could be done in one Night, and that he would 
| ly enough in the Morning, 
ter Deſign. Vet, that the 


: Co T F il os might not be altogether art bis 


Wir's End, he preſently diſpatch'd away ſome 
of his own, to inform him more 


pecricularly of theſe Commotions ; who 


bis ueht him News early in the Morning, that 


the Commanders had quieted the Mutiny a- 

mong their Soldiers; and that ſome Troops 
of Horſe, being ſent up into the City, had 
diſperſed the Apprentices, and that the Re- 
giments were den muchas out of the 


4 . 3 1 s * ey ; 
own, . os ml 
4 T7 - . E - Wo 8 Wk 4 : is F [4 1 1 
* 4 * 2 : * 5 * 
; „ 7 „ ** * ' : gots, 6 YL 50 r q 
ö 
\ 


Y 


2 M08 


oni Mens. 1 1 
v 80 har a Mi e ottnds Ades 


1 in che City, the General took his own = 1 
Time to march leiſurely that Morning, Fri. | 
day, February 3. into London. But before he g.. 3. 1 
enter d the ee be made a Stand at High- 
gate, where the being then but five 
thouſand eight Finn 100 Men, came again to 
rendez vous, and there receiy d Orders for the 
manner of their March into the City. The 
three Regiments of Horſe firſt, and rhe Ge- 
neral mounted at the Head of IR his 
Trumpets before him, accompany d with the 
— + Commiſſioners, and ſome of his own 
ncipal Officers; with ſeveral other Perſons 
of Quality, that had the Curioſity or Cour- 
teſy to meet him at his ſeveral Stages on the 
Way. After the Horſe march'd his four Re- 
giments of Foot: And in the Afternoon: he Ii 
made his Eutry by Greys Iun-· Laue, where, 4 
at the Noll, bo made a Stop at the Speaker's 20 100 
Door; but he being not yet return d from 
the Houſe, the 5 went on into the 
Strand; where being told that the Speaker's 
Coach was coming near, the General alight- 
ted from his Horſe, and, with much Ceremo- 
ny, complimented the Prince of the Senate, 
| _ his legiſlative Mace in the Boot of his 
| Coach. 


Coach. And "Ong accompany' 4 with ſome 
of his Horſe· G. 8 


1 ſigrd him befor ?han Apar 
Ho. - - monly ralldchs Prince's Lodgin 
41 88 "DM N Is bn e e e eee 


5 A 
#7 P C 3. 

IT * TAs Gy * NE 2 N E * 
V. WB 22 #: a 3348 4 9 4, r EPA ain 


— 


* 


* 8 # N * . 7 Ws T 0 
VI v1 1 . k 
1 


AS * 


The mean Ape rauts ofc the. General's 45 
„ © !/ an 1157 be: Council of State Fender the 
+I | od Oath of Abjwration to: dim, which: he re- 
17 dg fees; III. I. viſited by the Heads of the 
1 2 e Hanties. IV. Is intruduc d into 
4 the of Gommons,: where be receives 
1 — —— Speaker's the Subſtance 
bi Auſioer. V. The Fu ſpic ion: of the 
. _ Perkament,o au their Deſigns againſt his 
1 Lie diftover'd to Mr. Sund. VI. V 
eee abe General Fit. VII. As Ob 
wy 22 VIII. The 
| ed, IX. A Reſolution 
| RF. 7; * Co cok, Fo pay ub more 
| mo » Taxes till the Readmi/ſion of the ſecluded 
1 Aembers. X. The Rump impute this Re. 
Alubion to ſome Encouragement from the 
mee, XI. The General order d to ſale 


4 
C 4 0 - 
g 13 x . e 0 wh 


1 * ** 


4 ene ee e eee N NE 


1 Ka I's 8 rn 
4 6 - 
1 7 * % 


Ganser Mats. 223 
F/T] the.. | 1 7 Gates, | MI; Jbich. he 
© complies <with.r XIII. Aud executes their 
Orders. & IW. The Reſentment of his own 
. Officers, . XV. The Citizen's, Complaints 
o him. XVI. As Order to lreal the Gates, 
and difſoboe the: Common. Gouncih, | XVII. 
Tus Gates broken, XVII XIX. The anne 
Reaſons of the General's Compliance with 
. theſe Orders.” XX. A Petition to the 


Juncto for an Oath of Abjuration. XXI. 


De General's Army incenſed. XXII. be 
Ceneral erpoſtulates with the Juncta, and 
direct them to call aifree and Full Par- 
liament. XXIII. He quarters in the Ci. 
.ty. XXIV. The City's cold Reception of 
js 3 XXV. 7. "vy Lord Mayor confers with 
him. XXVI. A better Underſtanding, be. 
teen him and. the City; and the an 
Lune fel with his Letter to them. 


HE Citizens, that had been 8 
1 <d only to the prancing of Fleet. 
wvod s Troops. through their Streets, which 
were always kept fair and wanton,. and had 
us d to ſee thoſe well-cloath'd Red-Coars ſleek 
and trim in the Eaſe and Luxury of the City, 
bad but a cold Conceit of this Northern Ar- 
mY as how ae . Their Scorch Horſe 

| were 


. 4 * 


4 | 
* 1 L - 
: * OY > 
. 5 8 * 1 
4 5 J 2 * 
4 84 $4 . 
£ 4 
: 
- 4. 8. * ver ' y 
OY 4 : A 
z 1 9 * 
% 1 ” 5 * - 
( — 7 w_ mY : 
4 
; 4 «1 5 
$ 


N Winter about three h. hundred Miles ir 
1 and throug Th deep and "contiou'd.s Snowsz 0 
. that all | thei Way they bad ſcarce 8 "He 


8 i ö * ; 6 2 3 5 . K4- ot 


4 OS Tas 
1 85 their 1 


* 8 r * 1 . 2) } 2 ; 8 
* e, We — . 5 i p g 
4 4 . 4 


N N — 


next Mc ridge Salis raay, Febrw 
' the 18 Was invited. to take his 


| | | RE ö Hüncil of State, Where, pre- 
1 ſent tly after his Entrance, the Oath of Abju- 
[ ration Was tender d tg him by the Preſident. 
Fr tha "the Offer of it, and 


| "was MEE, ſeveral 


d't here ket be a 
C5005 W e e e had taken the 7 


+ Oath and thoſe who had refus d it; by which 

| | himſelf and Choy Who. demurr'd might be 

| better ſatisfy d. He allo rold them, that the 

Et. Officers ef his 555 Army were very tendet 

in taking Oiths; and that he would not ob- 

lige himſelf e to xhis new one, till 

q* he had firſt acquainted. them therewithz and 

. ſo, taking his Leave of the Aſſembly. retumd 
Rar his ers at White-Hall. 1 5 

1 | | III. Wazns 


| Ly 
1 Hl 
F 7 
ef 
1 F 
> _ : 
14 
4 "4 
eu 1 Eg 
* "= 
£ . 74 
> ”# 
bo 
7 £ 


Bu, "ie which be was def to 0 down: 


N 


— —ä—— ſ— — 


4 wr ble Reply, Ys bontriv- 

ft e Te per of thoſe Ears that were = 4:44 
to hear him. And tho! ſome Men that wiſtrd 1 
"OF him 


— 
8 
1 
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[ 


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ee 


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9 * * 5 —— 4 4 . . — 3 5 . — * a - 


* e ** ny rr uy ay * W rene 
* 25 N 
7 4 f an FRY 


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1 
8 
; 
20 
$ fx 
8 
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{ 
1 \ * 1 * a 
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; aign 4 his whole Diſcourſe: 70 His intercediig 
. 
5 
4 1 


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10 d 4 8 f f 
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5 a off: * 
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14 ' Speech they were thought firſt. to have - 
| | cCceiv'd that Name, which" ”_ have neyer 


R R r Te oe he trop ces * 
a * * * » 1 
1 * „ waxy 2 vow „e 8 1 7 3 as 


2 e ot 8 4 te 
Gorton ; 


nta; Ln. Awhich wos chene 
mman· Talk of che. Town; he told him ſe-· 
cretly, that the Hrlament had ſuch Suſpici- jj 
ons-of hin as that! it was — to remove | 
N him bad in 
his B Biel 03. Thigh © IR / re 71 4 a Hp bf e - ? 
a 5464 rod! Hat, root: Wet WE rica 
\Vk:Mr-Swukb#:obſ ? 1 


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e Ma. n 


4 4 re N 1 p ry , 
5 and ſeem d 
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145 


- 


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— ꝗ˙—— 4 22 ore Ay 


{ | W U N * 1 a wich this 
| 'of he” Parlidiverit; and 
er it, the the; CBmHüA 

publi ift daa ote or 1. Order of 


the . Membe 
ttter delfrefd at "Morpeth, an 
'  heif-Commilſioneis: ab Hirborough _ 


” PET gen yd tro a ny wer ene oo 


— — . pry rr ry wr mae 


N 5 1 2 f Wai . of + 5 * 7 2 ö 9 :, 5 * * 
c | WT 0 N 5 1 FF a Oe * 89 
wected Suppr.. 4 44 — f r 
1 _ *. 1 F . La . f . ; : 5 " N , * a -: 
4 V A 1 Th 
4 i 10 1 $ 10 15 9 2 | = 
708 2 7 ; N 1187 N 8 
* 8 * 7 1 . " p C A.) 
9D ; 


* 


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. ²— LT EI. 


nene 


% e e eee n by op — 10 en * Lhe r ̃ ˙u — N —— 1 


3% a. Ser rn ev 2 „* — 4 — 1 Y 
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s nr 
„ hy © 4 th —— — 
„ 


* 1 l $ 
\ ** * 


At el 


de this 


:Durtinor; 


* 


ts 4 | „ s $4 
. X ; 4 e . 
th» oh 1 hot 1453.4 Þ is 
. *. ) REP Vo 3 * 
by 


WV 
eo Fy * 


* 
1 
* 


2 


«£936 wen ot ber e 7 
—— 3 -prinoipal Git 


: | 77 * A 118% "90 my 
grin # Sn D AO ne abe Arby e 


ivd thein kindly; that the Citizens, being 
. 
; chat-chrow it, d Yarrzign'd 


= Þ- o 
- — —ä—ũ—C —— roo es — — — 2 


— —ũ—— — 22 


* 


WAR 


4 . 
- 8 E 2 * . 
n OOTY ET UG FRF yup, 
: © 


Denn 
* 


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— fu 
4 RT II 22 


— — — 


2 


x 


ar 


* 


. "Affliftnzcs of —.— Colooel Fats 5 Re 
wich the: Fown":an eee of the 


F 132400 . ficers 


354 4 3 e e ono eo en te or o_ 


h 3 
1 y ov 


chen bis Coumtenance, yer fire of þ bis Of 


= * -. 
— * 
c . 


| oY * bas. Oy 167 Amid 36d 


"2 * 


1403 di fuck dave; Uto limo Lp tow: 
XVI / Tune ARien of General Mast to- 
—ů — byalt 

inderftoodinor;! in choſe nnen 
ene e. ces he 
was then 'placd? For che Orders gut by | 
*ouncil"5FBrart; to Dach 


de or bee Net's Zee $290 
Forees inte abe City, co alinoc or 
eee ee ee ee ee eee 51 „ 
6} aig. 30.4 t V. 20084230100) eln nac. 


1443 * 


EIS IST: ᷑̃]¾m tt eqn in. arr eas 4 oo AT LB Pr rt; ara 474 * 
fs 6 * 


Tg — — Mice: tis 
Comma and Intereſt im his oπτ Army; for 
ben fᷓ ell Kk this preſent State of 
things could not poſſibly: hold long, but chat 
the furious and violent Proceedings of the 
Janko, ai ric Oc chey word o- 
on theniſclves therebyprandirhe further Dif: 
te — orpeig bis 
ir A then — give 
dortu —— 


putting — — me na. 
© CCI "ot to 246504 ey0togiinls 261 fag 


td — the De. | 


it pio yd Ge- 
| brea k down the Gates of the 

jt 66 up Legion of evil 
Spitits — lien worley/than” themſelves, 
with a Petition ro the Junctof us extra agant- 
ly \miſchieyous a their otes, and much 
— — "requiring the Oatly of 


1 . in any 
„„ 1A -- _—_ 


— #16 — blog. elde 20 700 1 ec 
i 40 eb ene eee thas' emo? aut. 


XVI. une 


Hall) ſore — came Di eprer 
ſented the dangerous Effects of that Day 8 
Workein the City, by which they, Rad- pro. 
vok'd aud diſobligd che Metropolis of the: 
kingdom, and. the. Noiſe of this Action, toge: 
ther with t Ar- OW, ntam „ would quickly 
ſpread all: the Nation — — ſuch another 
Piece of Mork Would certainly ruine them; 
1 rhe ſame time they-who: employ: 
prof e e e Jak Neva 
gunſt them that they bday ew 5 


; Nob); 


„ Leys np mg we yes ü» CW 


federate with: their 5 


6 — vere abby 


vn Arty," ; except 
Ba on, it was 
$s the 


i 


| 


: h 0 „ om oa 


* 
, 
: 

, 4; 

F : 
* 4 
£ "* 
Fs 
2 
1 
2 
% 
5 
7 
7 
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: 4 
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is 
4 s 8 
17 

- 


, 
$4 
* * f 3 


xt threat» oy 


— 


— 
eee Cunakkbee >< 


— 


e ao”. 


———— — 


[hs he gave * 
Ou 


* } "k 3 . | 5 


4/3 » 7 


> 


W 
a 


— 
Jo Bt Hg 


3 


— 


r We. „ wr . * n , —— us 9 a . 


Fr 


: [ 
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$4 
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0 {43 
1 * 
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> # 
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man 


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of, 


ont On to th Mach of bi Brea 


'# 


4 


110 15 min Y 155 3 i 70 0 Hot. 
: 210 2 GRAN Ak LT o RO: SF 


(env, amy very early to the 
ther Was, to, be ſign d byte 


. Hall, and went wp inc, 


de led his. rays to. a 


9 £ 


re 


| os 9 151% öl Lats y 70 * . a 


ere ese, 0 


N b 1 
343 m . IG. 55 uy 3 707 ee e Ts = 
: Li 


i Fore . that 


Apprehenfion of this his early Return amis 
chem this Morning, fo that his Nieten 
fond but à cold Eutertaihment, e 
cathe 93 with che Lord Mapor abott 
O | 4 W | We rt / Which he had! Met | | 1 
wird were r off." Nor Had they ty i 
aint Him een e Secret or N 1 


| | {7 
3 4 OY, > 2 


Ke 4 # 1 7 1 122 ob 4”. J . ** 1 1 IN 4 3 * | 
RAI Oy E9S IL td L333 


f tg Mayor 
ir . Robin ſon n, and 
Was conterited at laſt 
e Genetal, 705 to 14} 


# - 


XL 


prin 
w recep 2 With 
dlebürſe wich Mn Ne qi rering | 
ny. Wheretpon a Meffenger was 
neo "Fields, intreating Hint to daten 
g now ye) to the Lord 


ee 


! 


the 

Mace ede en as was not with that 

Comterince and freedom as formerly, Wick | 

the e Lord Mayor in ſome Meaſure e xcuſed, 
| R n from 


! eto pegs AAR I One - oe thn 3s 
2 I * "ag * - — N - 
« . 7 2 85 n 


| Hom thodareDiſordety e bad bar ppen'd in 


1 thecity. To wbich cee Th. 
F288 Bie Return this them g chief 
ö hy 10 redtify theſe Mifunder fandings, which 


City; ; au. to that«En , | entreat 60 bis Tad | 
ſhip to diſpatch away bis Orders unto the 
and Common Conne, {which was 
* JaMe:tac.. o-had-dillolyed ) defering 
" Vhem to give 4 a 8 2 in the 7 
aoon at their Gyild-Hall: Which was accor. 
dingly dons before. they far flown to Di. 

ner! Ae ic en ee 

ede 1 6 Wy 

XVI TAE N met 9 3 M 
tertaiument at the Lord Mayor's Table, than 
Bis Letters had done with the Juncto at //e/- 
minſter; who had been debating upon then 
alb the Morning The appointing chem a de 
finite Day for the conclulling of their own 
SBeſſion, they look d big: as ta more civil 
n May of diſſolving them. But the filling up 
| the Vacancies of the Houſe by now Eledi 
ons, did toueh them in the, moſt tender and 
 <lſehtial Patt of their Power and: Being; ſince 
th well knew," it was ſcarce poſſibe 
to et en Perſons return d that would be a 


Y "TV anc a as themlelves, 1 


2 2 0 22 1 
3 << a 5 — an 


” : 245 
if the Pe As 4 liked? lelt to 8 cir free Choice, 
(which eeulg not now be binder d) they 
would arne chem wich 0 duch Elections, as 

| 3 hen n to 
| 1 they had commit 


1 BU: 3 Yeh : { Wh N WW. | * L wy "A A N 


7 vhs * * 3 n a 4 W W ad: N 6 3 Wo 


RE. - Wop of > 14.9 1 


| N 7 „ U. 
tt rig 30 0 vo 1 TV io 0 me 


Pp Wear EYE «od... 4 


| The Fund to 4 emble- their 7 2 
II. Aud Ts n, of Thanks to the 
ene) ready Obedience to their 


Aer bod ang 


Generale Officers an theſe. Meſſen- 
eue junBo.'. IV. The General's 

Comma dof Temp in Mt; meets the 
burt of ' Aldermen and Common Council. 


. Houſe in Broad ſtreet. 

-The Fantto has the Name of Rump Par 
amen gien it. N. Scheme of the 
1 FKunp Purliament fur overtruling the Ge- 
Na XI. The Authors Ol ſer vation up. 


R 3 on 


latł Ori Him to return to | 
Wbite-Flall. III. The Reſentments of the 


| F . His Speech to them VII. Great Joy | 
in the City, VHI. 7% General * 


1 


0 


„„ - Mig I Se CIA 4, 


2 ah 


KL 
1 
$ 
* 
11 
1 
w_ 
£5 
of 5 
2 

. 

F f 
1 
PA. | 
. 


— ers 44 „ 933 1 k 


{4 700 * V | hit A C Hz 9 i „ 71 TY. 


te him Hum ll B. 


ſectians whilſt. the more h 15 
them were, as red A 


$446; Ma "OO re · 
Hs Quan. eng tg 1 all. XIII. 
Cees 2750 Ein en, Als Return fo 


| . dhphicat jons 
; wo XY. But par- 
riaulariy from the. ſecluded M. ow ek 
BG VI. A general Charader of, the ſecluded 


[pf ad; 
, 


OR. + 


Abe. Funds give their Rea. 
be Rea Ag. 4 the others. 


| * XX WW 4 0 
je Tome 7 * 
„ | 10% 115 

2 os 2 it * 2 ee 5 170% . . 1 


8 *abjuring Party in 
e gad all along been 


= of the General, began now to _ E 


their on Politicks, in the. P. 


olent and  extrav: at Proceedings, 

L 1 ans na 12 0 thels Methods with 
themſelves unable (hav- 
on of the City) 13 


y IT x6 trend him wt 
City, „ Where the + him the Lord 


's Houfe, ently after yds ad 
from T NN IVI. 


32 85 N had N W YA, 8 ae . 


*%, + 


* 


ing upqn 
thould be choſen for A 


f 4-4 


+ f A 
nge Wd 48,446 STI droge my 48 


2 the 
chem with. Perfidy 
Ingritivaloy and that joy were-deſign- 
ing rather to put wheat into the Prote- 
WK of their late Enern es, than to oblige the 
Army which natd | Wen Al thoſe 
ry IK > Officers 


. 


7 K „ „ i. 


* 


— II —2 2 ens 


* 


e eee 


” i 
4+ 
i 
rz 
8 
} 
nt 


I 
* 1 
51 
>, 
+ þ 

"4 

+ 

* 


'Y 
25 
7 
+ 
'% 
« 
; 


— —ñ——ꝓ— —— — 


COS 


WE, Wm? 


4 
ea 2 * os 


| tot) 


mentors Pleaſed: ro purſue” the Advice of 


beds: — Scotland a — * 


thority, (thong they were yet continued in 
| „ n of the 


parted with their Diſcon- 
eng e againſt hom. . 
wit 1 0 Ine A Ec 4 it Irin | 
IV. Tur General, whioſe bn it was 
his: on R Neſentments hy the Paſ: 
ers, was not diſpleas d with 
ek — nor did he concern him. 
ſelf to moderate their Heats; but, after his 
eee eee he at laſt told Mr. 
2 fo, ©: That if the Parka: 


his Better," in Sfibidg , , Mriis by 
Friday neut fon! fuling ap the Houſe, all 


FF 


them. But 


this free, anch Nnart Piſcourſs of the Srorch 
Officers to theſe two Senators, was ſo diſſe · 


rent from. thoſe:Obſervances which had been 


— 
** — ——ͤ—é 2 —-— a 145 4h» 4 v4 


paid to them: when they march'd together 


towards 


„that they took their Leaye 


| nor reel urid and return back 0 
Hieſtminſeer... 


8 e 1 e 


N NI. 4 1 1 WA Fand 0 3 . 1 * * | 5 2 A Wl \ 17 


.So bon as che ey veegoney been 5 
A . was 


\ 


— rr rrp er “ wy wn TY oY # 0 


ee 


been ſent to the Preſs, was before this Ti 
publickly 


Mb: ns a; dens 
Vin: his c 


Nennt riot oak Oft O71 


page * 8 


em That rh loft: Num bo 


eee 1 the 


and done; he cuud only be forty or Ss 
Affronts whith had been put upon hem 4 
gainſt bis) ill Thur this Day be 
ſolud to renden a — en bei, 
Lettert, bun he was able to do at Morpeth, 


uith their Deſires then, he had this 3 
orien: to the Parliament, 70 Hue on 
| "thei 


| br Dori == om | 
: Copy allo of his Let - 
ter to the Juncto, (which in the Morning had 


| ed in Print. 3314 119117 vil 1* 


friendly ſaluted chis Aſſembiy 0 — | 


Life; the Execution of which wer ai cr. | 
Jeng per ren Than Geis A pu 


where he received them; and, in Compliance 


- Þ 
1 2 
+ 
3 
1.5 

— 

x 
1 

- 
;& 
1 


r ee EEC CEL LESETD 4 — +> 


to male eu for the fitting down 


debe Deren of rh. 


e 
upon the New 


Day before, when their Poſts and Chains 
4 — — che-Hop 


an thniverſals vor and Extlltation] and Quar- 


250 A 2 L. i F E wy 


bein Writs, rin —— Dey for filling 
af! their Haufe, an by the fert h of May 
r — embl "and Herd 
F a fall 
and free Parliament. Ia the interim by 
wes reſolved ro quarter his Army in their 
Of; aui u bontraue hum, umong then, 
til hea how the Chmtenth bf bis —.— 

Wy au Mirtion, were 


Periformed. Av, en 20 bl Du 1010. 


11 A WON RGA 2014; Oh Jac 
ING Ta Acclitmariotis -of that ar 
Anden er Obe lis at the If. 
aminiut unexpectedy 

E ert. ö — the Oities of Greece, 
greater tha the Joy of rhe City 
sto theilt Deliverunce from rhe 
ndage oF ehis Juncto It is not cal to fay, 
ther ens were tote npftd ith 
bar we Goheral told chem this 
what they had ſuffer d by his $0] 


Were r 


rs d and them Gates and Port cul 
8 — 

' crores was 10 welcome 
Noel) thavh-Sfhets were p "Fd with 


23 ) mn. 


02 NEK AL. Moxk. 27 ˙¹ 


ters were preſently {er out for the Generabs 
Regiments, Which hitherto had ſtood all Day | 
on their Arms hut now Meat and Drink was 
ſent to them eee every. e 
aw {ir e * W ATV A | 
oth uk ec A; $3348, yur oh Er * 
MA VIII. Tar Genet having done:his.Bub- 
nels at Guild Hall, took Leave of the Citi 
zens, Who Rxprels a very Particular Satisfa- 
ction and Confidence in him. And from 
| thence he went to the Ball. Head Tavern in 
Cheapſder * ahbe aer d the (Qparrers C 
bor che. Sechtity or che City. — = 
whencs he went ver late to quarter, for che 1. 
profents, at n ouſe — 73 
which, PSHE Pf A 14 


2 A * . . " * — 
8 * N 3 *. . — 
* 1 K as « N N * js 2 n _ 2 
ö NT mas De 8 f r et rather Rn. x * — eee * 
Y r r n e re * 4, rr : 3 1 Pl bo Ra 2 
by * a . . W „ 5 — — — . Soo TSS 


nee forced CER all Ni 2 "and: wah 
irh hig Guards. e Ha Yano! 16:9 nf 
t 4 {£188 80 65 1811 I God F 304 


IX. Bur beſpre this, the am S at 
common People, in Deteſtation of the Juncto, 
(to v hom they hadi given, this Nightztho kaſt- 
ing Name of the Rum Parli had ſer 
al he ell-inthe City on. ritgings and lan- 


= 


in 2 Speck hieß 9 
E 


3 


: Px" T'PE 90 
ed kill * lorking;” and this" Jari de, Night, - 
Feb. 11 February 11. Was Kill tlie roal an of the | 


4 79% Nene 4 e. Na CAVES 


a 4 Tr | 7 2H; $48; fell Ain 


be, 807 able "now. che General in 1 18 
=. C Harte e and the See fo their Jollity, 
we will retreat a little while, {though late) ro 
Weſtminſter, and ſee what this dew named 
Rump f Parliament had,” this Afternoon and 
Fyenin ng, Veen deing there When their Mef- 
ſengers, Sell and Robinſow; "rerari'd'from the 
General out 6f the City, they gave the Eouſe 
an'A Account bf his Adonis" thete, and with 
what Piſcbutſe they had been entertain d by 
his Officers, Which led them into fürther = 
only, oth of the Genèral and his Army; i 
"om uch that then calbd for tlie late Order of 
their Hotiſe,”: pointing five Commiſſionets 
ter the govetniüg of the Army, to be read to 
them: wheretipoh they ſtruck out Overton, 
e being abſenr at Huli he could be of 
no Uſe to them, and put in Colonel lured, 
| Who was upon the Place. Three of theſe 
five e were to make a Quorum; but it being 
moved, that General Mont might be always 
de r this three tor” the Quorum, upon 
the Vote it was carry d againſt him: Sd that, 


we _ __ not take away his Com- 
miſſion 


SENI Monx. 253 
miſſion, in Te erminis, yet in Effect and Con- 
ſequence, they: had done it for Sir Ar cup 


Haz/erig, Alured, and Malton, were at any” 


Time ſufficient to over-rule General Monk 
and Colonel Morley. And thus they thought 


they were even, with him, for enforcing them 


to fill up their Hoſe, e e their 


Kahn at a Day. cr 7 * 77 1 IN F N 
nr Gtr zi [55102 1 178 
Xl. ;THE, preſent 488 Nas FFT . | 


psd che Villzinies of cheſe Mew but Polte- 
zity; will laugh at hey Follies, alſo: For tho 
the little Foplips, Of their Party haye magni- 
yd them AS; ths; prime Politicians of of the 
World, yet, this was an Inſtance of, it 
weak and impotent D 
Revenge, to provoke 4 re 
General, Who had an Army ſo, 2455 at bis 
Derxotion „and was poſſeſs d the \City, 


POW. Te, 


here he had been too nimble f or th em, by | 


recovering in an Inſtant his Eſtimation among 


the People, and leaving the Odium of what i 


| he: had done upon themſelves: So that now 
he was in a Condition to baffle | Fg, and all 
the Commiſſioners. to boot; and , to, deſpiſe 
the Weakneſs of their Rage, in bes e 
1 Tea ben they, fark, 705 DIRE... oy 


$4 f \ » . - e 4 7 * E 2 1 * 43 * 5 p 1 ö 5 by; +, 


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WE, 254 ä 

0 Bor chbegh the preveiling'F: t 

| > Parkiwent tad been ie Genfer 
Weite diebitge dm; yer iche Getieral was to 
11 | Hiſctver vo enke ay pidlicle Notice 6f r 
9 preſent, having many other Irons in the Fire; 
1 nor was his own Army (though in a good 
hk Toney: ou ir) yen ally 0 a to 
ttt Neſelution eren fe Fe N . 

un 33993. Þ 0a; : 10 n. 


XII. Bor this Diſcontent, ariſi eee 


tte Juncto and General- Aanbs Army, was 
bt. very welcome News to-'thoſe other Forces 
under Fleettoded and Lambert; who now e. 
| ſtteemd their own Infolencies juſtify'd, when 
| they diſcermqd the Army from Scorlond, 
which the Houſe had ſo mach felyid upon, 
were likely alſo to quarrel with them. Not 
| were they without Hopes, if the Jealouſies 
| ſfwuld encreaſe, to make their own Advyan- 
gg rhereby, and rhar their od Maſters would 
be enforced᷑ to ſeek Protection from them a. 
gainſt General Aon; who yet was more 
wary and conſiderate, than to let things run 
to ſuch — as ann, va _ ww 
Party Advantage upon him. * 5 | 
Wu 1 him in bis truft Ous ters at 
the Glaſs· Houſe; but now che following 
Week he remov * chence to 9 
N. Where, | 


__ GyxgraAL Monk: 255 
where, with, 22 L anther large 


is Guards. OAT 15010 1. Ne! W 705 
et ee n Hανj, ed et 40n 
| xIn Anp now the Runp Parliament, 
finding they; were too weak to dell wich him . 
Abet by Tricks or Force, conti tina d their fur- 


— of, — . a2 ee Feb. * 
him again to aſſiſt them with his Preſenee and 
Counlels 1 = which: — return'd Aale: che 


8 Een * he — — Poſſibly. re 
chen; but; for the preſent, bis Continuence. 
in the City was. further neceſſary, beeunſe of - 
theſe. —— they © which ns 


Hands. f — your — ee I 118 
Fanaticks;7 aud. that his owns Fercer were. = St | 
great by. alarm d, bill theſe . TIS were again 
reels d ut the Juncto, and Council of 
State, Were not more importunate 0 reco- 
ver him again to M hits · Hall, chan the Citi- 
zens were do perſuade his Contieuance among 
_ „ for his on Safety, as/ 
510 % well 


— 


— TP 


+ "'# Ly 


| well as theits. Ar r the ſawe wie, 


dino — — and other vio- 


en Cofturies about the Counties where Fleet. 


wood's Army quartered; poſſeſſing them with 


ces; that they had enter d into ſecret Deſigns 


with the City of London, to alter the Go- 
vernment, and to nene the King. Some 


of theſe Reports he took publick Notice of, 
. athens he contemn'd. Alfie 62» 


av. Donne his 4 Abade in his "I 
at Drapers-Hall, he was continually beſet 
with Applications to him from the ſeveral 
Intereſts in the City, and from the Heads of 


the Presbyterians and Independent Parties; 


to whom he rerurn'd ſuch Anſwers as the 
Condition of his Affairs would allow. 


XV. Tur Meſſages alſo from J/e/tmn- 
2 fer were ſtill daily continued: But, above all 

the reſt, that Intereſt in the City and Coun- 
try, which the General could beſt truſt, had 
now begun very powerful Addreſſes to him, 
for the reſtoring the formerly ſecluded Mem- 
bers. The ener had before refolv'd to ac 


ime he 4 was al- 
ractices againſt him, 
by ome eee State, in 


Jealouſies againſt General Mont and his For. 


compliſn 


ha 


| 7 1 A A % 
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IT 1 1 loxk. 2 5. 
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as 


compliſh, his Doſgrofcl int 4 duc i 


tereſt to readmit — < ecluded Me 
hy o en of it, as the 

| this time i o e Well knew 
fo, now lung, Wal e er Wi 


Part whiceofnd g © pro 5 be C0 
than conſent to the Retum af hals cluded 
Members, whom they had formerly diſoblig- 
ed by ſo impudent and injuriqus a Secluſion. 
He conſider d alſo that the Engliſb Army, 
who had been the Inſtruments. of that Vio- 
lence; would grow very apprehenſive upon 
the News. of their Return; Nor was che per- 
fectly well ſatisfy din che nclination of bis 
own Officers. But reſolving to make ſome 
Eſſay, how far the Contrivance would go, he 
vas contented-.to receive / the Viſits from ſe- 


reral of thoſe. ſecluded Members, having ſtill 


order d the Buſineſs ſo, that ſome of bis: Offi», 
* mould be preſent at the. Diſcourſe. 


5 22 to Maga, ; 24 185 2 5 4 ug PL 


NI. W p — ng of. x2 


the Presbyterian Intereſt, and ſome. of them 
had been buly enough. in beginning the Mil- 
8 1 33 


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258 ue L I IE of. 


Fortunes of their King and Country; but were 
now grown wiſer, by the Experience of their 
Miſtakes, and the Miſeries of a Civil War, 
which had ended in almoſt their own undo- 
ing, as well as the Death of the King. Some 
of them alſo were Perſons of good Eſtate, and 
Quality, and eaſily apprehended the Inſecu- 
rity of their Condition and Fortunes, whilſt a 
violent Juncto of Robbers and Republicans 
go vern d at I efiminſter, and were ſupported 
by an Army of needy and boiſterous Fana- 
ticks. They now ſaw clearly there was no 
way left to ſertle the Nation, but by reſtor- 
ing the Monarchy ; only they would firſt fit 
it to their Church Diſcipline, and melt down 
the Crown into a new Form, and reduce the 
Sceptre to a Length of their own. For the 
Proſecution of theſe Ends, they were as eager 
to be again fingering the Government, as the 
Juncto, then ſirting, were to keep them out 
of it. But being Men of much better Moral: 
and Principles than moſt of the other; they 
had the Prudence to propoſe their own Re. 
admiſſion- with! that Moderation and Temper, 
as was very acceptable to the General and 
his 1 They aſſurd them, that their 
Return would not interfere with the Generals 


n in * in behalf of the Par 


wap pretended by choſe now fitting, 
the Removal of the fecluded Members, ſo 


GEN ERAL Monk. 259 


' lament as it ſat October 7. for it was ſtill the 


ſame Parliament that would be continued. 


; | They con vine d them that having, by the 


ſame Declaration, undertaken to ſabject the 
Military Power in Obedience to the Civil, 


they had oblig d themſelves to ſecure. their 
Readmiſſion, ſince they had been remoy'dfrom 


their Ram by the Violence of the ne 
XVII. Tas SHOE od his on were 


ſo well fatisfy'd with this Propoſal, that, in 
he next Place, they were reſolv d to hear what 


could be alledg d againſt them. To that pur - 

poſe it was ma that ſome of theſe ſecluded 
Members ſhould meet at a Conference with a 
like Number of thoſe now fitting, which was 


xcordingly Song end eter day Feb. 18. the Ge- Feb. 18 


preſent. Where it 
that ſince 


many things had been done, both as to Change 
of the Government, Liberty of Conſcience, and 
the Sale of publick Lands, as was likely to 
be all interrupted and diſordered again, by 
the Return of theſe Members, to the further 
Prejudice, and retarding the Settlement of the 
ee e amn 


, : 4 : 
> * 1 : 1 
Ss = . . 
. : -/ 


SIG PS 1.7 e © 
e — 3 


what had been done in their long Abſence; 


wealth; and leave things in ſome good Or- 


Fellows, and would be contented to ſtreng- 


cluded Members. But becauſe the Inclination 


General enter d into further Diſcourſe with 
his Officers, where ſeveral of them were incli 


%. The * 1 1 2 „ 


"XVI "mT. oy {ke hs ſecluded ben re. 
ply'd: That they would not bring with them 
their Paſſions nor Revenge into the Houſe, 
nor concern themſelves in any Man's Pro- 
perty, nor loſe Time in reflecting back upon 


but would direct all their Thoughts forward, 
in purſuing ſuch Counſels as might lay a bet. 
ter Foundation of Settlement to the Common- 


der, for the further Endeavour of the Parlia- 
ment which ſhould ſucceed them. Moſt of 
thoſe Gentlemen from the Juncto, were of 
the moderate Party in the Houſe, who were 
weary'd' with the Extravagancies of their 


then their Intereſt hy the Acceſſion of the ſe. 


of the Houſe could not be given but by their 
Vote in Parliament, they parted on both 
Sides wirhout ne to any final Agree: 
ment. Be 72 


XIX. War x they were withdrawn; the 


nable —_— to reſtore the ſecluded Members 
But 


ENI Moxx. 261 
But others among them, of the Independent 4 | 
Perſuaſion, (who had been tamper'd with by 1 
the Heads of their Party) began to demurup- © — _ | i 
on it, unleſs thoſe, Members would giye Secu- 1 
rity, to declare for the Government of a nn 
Common - wealth, and Lil erty of Conſcience, 1 
and that they would conſent to a further Act T8 
for Confirmation of konten dales N 1 
| 10 N 
KG To, Girisfy the” nies © in 1 4 
WhO offer d them, the General appointed Ta 0 | 
three Perſons of his principal Truſt, to debate o | 
theſe Points further with ſome of the ſecluded 1 


Members, in a Conference next Day; which 
was to he held at Mr. Auneſſyis Houſe (the res. 19 
preſent Earl of Ang leſe 5.) The ſecluded 


# * 


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ee 


Members were not willing to depart from = 
their firſt Length; but, upon a further De- | 
bate, gave them freth Aſſurance, that they if 
would make no Alteration in the preſent Go- | 


yernment; bur leaye thar Point wholly to the | 
next Parliament. And for an Act to con- N 
firm the Sale of publick Lands, they were not 31 
yet reſolv'd to paſs any Act at all. But, that i 


there might bg no Jealouſy upon them, they 
were content to be limited in the chief Points 
they ſhould conſult upon; and, in one 1 


15 ies sgachuk their Seſſion, 55 


2 o—_, 


13 3 2 


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—— — — 


262 


n. IE 
C HAP. XN. 


I. 'The Genereh reſolves upon F® Au on 


i, the fechuded Members, 'npon certain 
erms; II. Which- they ſubmit to. = 
\ They are admitted into the Houſe. 
The Behaviour of the Juncto upon 1 
Admiſſion. V. The Lords alſo deſire to be 
reſtored to their Seats. VI. The General 
' declares that he has no Intention to alter 
the preſent Con ftiturion of 'a free State, 
or Common-wealth, in order to ſet 1 
 Chales Stuart, or any ſingle Perſon. VII. 
le is made Commander in Chief of all the 
Land Forces, but inthe Navy Mountague 
is joined with him. VIII. Sir George 
Booth and others diſe hargd from Impri- 
" fonment, and Lambert impri ſon d. IX. The 


© Oath of Abjuration voted down, and the 
Council of State; another being appointed, 
 moſi of whom were well affected to the 

King. X. Mr. William Morrice admitted 


as a Domeftick : in the Gen eral's _ 
tert. 


LL this while the General was very 
uneaſy in the preſent State of things. 


From the Juncto now ſitting he expected no 


9 


| GENERAL MONK. * 
good: The Eugliſb Forces in the Co 
degan to be mutinous; and ſome of his own 
Officers, by long deliberating, were grown 1 
more unſetrled. So that he was now reſbly- nl 
ed, withour further Ceremony, to put ſome es | 
Stay to the Courſe of things, by admitting Ih 
the ſecluded Members. To that End, Man- i tb 
day, February 20. he deſired a Meeting a. l. 25 1 
gain with them, and had appointed four Ar- 1 
ticles to be drawn ready, which ſhould be 
fubſcribed by all that were preſent, and by i 
thoſe alſo who were abſent, ne; _ 
were admitted into the Houle. - 
Fiss, To ſettle the Conduct of the . 
mier in the three Nations,' ſ as might beſt 
cure the Peace of the —— Se- 
condly, To provide for the Support of the 
Forces by Sea and Land, and Money alſo for 
their Arrears, and the Contingencies of the 
Government. Thirdly; To conflitute a Gonn- 
eil f State for the Civil Government of 
Scotland and Ireland, and to iſſue ont Writs 
for the ſummoning a Parliament to meet at 
Veſtminſter the 20 of April. Fourthly, 75 
eon ſent to their own Di Nolutien by a Time | 
that JOUR oy limited fo ara | 


U. So PI as they were aſſembled, the 
+ 8 ö Articles 


Feb. 21 


Foc, er reg le ds ace error 


* IS. % „ 4 
1 7 PP. 7 . _ PS * 


264 I LIFE of.) 


Articles were read to them, and willingly ſub- 
ſcribed by all then preſent, who were fo very 


well ſatisfy'd with this Method he had taken, 
that they promis d to give him a Commiſſion 
of General over all the Forces in the three 
Nations, both by Sea and Land. Which in- 


deed at this Time was alſo a ſeaſonable Of. 


fer; for his old one granted by the Juncto 


being confin d to the 224 of February, Was 


to expire within, two Days, 


Ar their parting wWith him, the — . in- 
Weed them to meet him the next en 
at his late pus i at bute-Hall. 


Tow next — ably: be left che City, 
and his Head- Quarters, to which he never 
return d more, and haſten'd to V hite-Hall, 


| Where he met the ſecluded Members, whom 


he entertain d with a ſhort Speech, recom- 


Hl mending, to them the. Care of the Nations, 
and to keep their Word with him, aſſuring 
them, he; ſhould impoſe nothing new upon 


them; which was punctually performd by 
him during their Whole Seſſion. And then 
order d Major Miller, who commanded his 
Guards, to conduct them into the Houſe of 


Commons, and divers alſo of his other Oſfi- 


cers armed them to the Door, 
| 1 | IV. Tais 


i 


x 


* 
7 
# 


* 


IV. Tars Reſolution of admitting them 


that Morning into the Houſe, was fo private- 
ly carry d, that the old Juncto were infinite- 
ly ſurpriz'd' and diſorderd When they ſaw 
them enter. The violent and abjuring Party 


preſently found, that it would not be worth 
their while to keep their Seats, and therefore ; 


reſign'd them to theſe new, Comers, and quit- 
ted the Houſe, ſore of them muttering theit 
Diſcontents againſt che General, as they went 


out of the Door. But the more moderate 


Party among them congratulated the Return 
of the ſecluded Members; and both Sides 


preſently apply'd themſelves to their Buſi- 


neſs. 


V. Bur whilſt the ſecluded Members of the 
| Houle of Commons were thus earneſtly treat. 


ing with the General for their Readmiſſion, 


lome of the Nobility, and particularly the 
Earl of Ftrafford, were as importunate with 


him for the reſtoring the Lords alſo to their 


Seſſion. But the wary General thought the 
Return of the Commons was as fair and ſafe 


Length as he durſt adventure to go at one 
Step, reſeryiug the Admiſſion of the Peers to 
b 7 i a fur- 


8 
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4 
4 
3 
1 
3 

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266 The LIFE of 
a further Conſideration, and the Temper of 
my Parliament chat was to . ; 


v.. Tax General heving thaw 1 the 
ſechided Members again in their Seats, and 
— what Diſorders the News thereof might 
raiſe g the diſtant Forces of the Engliſſ 
Army, was rclolv's to ſatisfy them preſently 
with the Reaſon and Neceſſity: of what he 
had done, — they ſhould receive any 
worſe or different Impreſſions from others. 
And to that purpoſe he commanded the ſame 
Day a Council of his Officers to attend him, 
and to draw up a ſatisfactory Letter to all the 
remote Forces and Garriſons of the three 
Nations, concerning the Readmiſſion of the 
ſecluded Members; aſſuring them, that no- 

thing was thereby intended to alter the pre- 
ſent Conſtituion of a free State or Common- 

wealth; that without reſtoring theſe Mem- 
bers, the preſent Conſtitution of the Houſe 
could raiſe: no Money for Support of the Ar- 
my and Navy, which now would be {peedily 
rais d and ſent to them. And the ſucceeding 
Parliament, which was to meet within two 
Months, ſhould further confirm all publick 


| Sales and — of Lands in the three 
eta: Nations. 


ſend an Officer from their ſeveral Regiments 


and Garriſons, that might give the Lord Ge- 
neral Mond an Account of their Complianco 
wich him herein. And, that they might ap- 


prehend no Deſign of Alteration upon them, 
they were alſo ſtrictly requir d to look after 


all Perſons defigning Diſturbances in Favour 
of Charles Stuart, or any other ſingle per- 


ſon, or intended Authority, and to give an 
Account of them to the Parliament or Coun- 


cil of State. This Letter was dated February 


21, and ſign'd by the General, with twelve 


of his Colonels, five Licutenant Colonels, 


eight Majors, and ſome few Captains, and 
preſently ſo many Hands were employ'd to 


tranſcribe the Letter, that the ſame Night 


there were Copies enough ſign'd, and ſent a- 
way to every Regiment in England, and to 


all the Commanders in chief i in Scotland and 


Ireland. 


vn. This: Night the 6 left White- 
Hall, and ſettled his Head-Quarters at St. 


James's, which, being a Place ſomewhat di- 
ſtant from the City, would leſs expoſe him to 


Viſits, and Obſeryations upon him, and 
* he might more FRY make ready 


thole 


GENERAL Monk. 267 
Nations. They were then further deſired to 


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268 The LIFE. ot 


thaſe farther ſecret Contrivauces, which Wie 
next to come upon the Stage. Here he receiy d 
an Account, what Vote the Houſe had paſs d 
that Day; having firſt raz d and expung'd all 
thoſe Orders in the Journals, which had 
been made to authorize their - Excluſion; 
Next they conſtitured his: Excellency Gehe. 
— Monk, Commander in Chief over all the 
Forces at Sea and Land, in Eng land, Seor- 
land, and Treland: But in the Truſt of the 
Admiralty, they admitted General Mou. 


gue to an equal Authority with him, which 


was the firſt falſe Step this newly re- enter 
Parliament made with their Reſtorer, having 
aſſur d him of the ſupreme and entire Com- 
mand, both in their Armies and Navy, with. 
out a ſecond Perſon to ſhare with him in ei. 
ther. But of this the General took no notice, 
being very well ſatisfy'd of the Worthinch 


and good Intentions of his Collegue, and 


having now, beſides the Conduct of his own 


F orces, the Care allo of thoſe two other Ar- 


mies in England and Ireland, which were 
= to give bim Trouble enough, 


vm. Tur Houſe alſo appointed the Re- 
leaſe of all thoſe Citixens, who had been com- 
1 by, Order of the late Council of State, 


aud 


and diſcharged Sir George Booth from his 
impriſonment: in the Tower, with all thoſe 
other Gentlemen alſo that had been confin'd 
with him upon the ſame Account; and order d 
Major General Lambert to be impriſon d in 
their room. And about 'the fame Time Dr. 
Elaren, Biſhop of Ely, who was Fellow Pri- 


releas'd alſo at the General's Mediation, af. 
ter his almoſt twenty Teas Confinement 


there. 


IX. Tae Houſe having voted down the 
late Council of State, with the Oath of Ab- 
juration, they appointed a new one, (conſiſt- 
ing of thirty ane Perſons) ..w ſucceed. Moſt 
: whereof, for their Character, and good Incli- 
| tions towards the King's Service, were ac- 


-_ Ld a 


counted of the very choice and Flower of the 


Aſſembly, and of this Council the General 
was one. 


Members was quickly ſpread all over the Na. 
tion; and they who were already enter'd, diſ- 
patch'd the ſpeedy Advice thereof to their 
Acquaintance that were abſent in the Coun- 


tries, who accordingly haſten'd their Return 
into 


GENERAL Monk. 269 


ſoner wiah General Monk in the Tower, was 


X. Tur Fame of 3 the e ſecluded 


: 
. 
3 
* 
: 
{ 
AN 
: 
: 


follow hereafter to be related. / 


#34 i. WF EC 
* 5611 4 1 


27% The LIFE of 
into the Houſe. Among the reſt Mr. Wit 


liam Marrice of Deveatbire,. came up to 
London, who, being ally d to the General, 


and alſo particularly recommended to bim 


for bis great Learning and Prudence, by his 
Brother Mr. Nicholas Monk, was retain'd with 


him as a domeſtick Friend in his Quarters at St 


Fames's, Where he became an Inſtrument of 
ſeveral extraordifiary n ich will 


4 
7 1 — 5 ſv {4 
* a 4 — * / 

ee. 7 
CET. S 5 I Vi 

„ b . , a "26, 0 4 u 

4 wn 
$4 7 4 9 Y * 4 7 s 1 LA: : d) 4 
* 1 : *. was * : 4 g * 1 „ . *.# : 41 4 ok 2 1 4 N « 


2617 7 5 S143 41 by + 39% 1. 0111 ie A * $4. 414 | 


GE NERAL M ONK. 271 


1 The G oth.” ee ps fo 5 150 0 
bleldience of the Army, and Garri/ons.. II. 
The Condition of Ireland. III. Colonel O. 
verton mutinies at Hull, but ſubmits, aud 
_ the Garrifon 3s gruen to Colonel Fairfax. 
IV. An Act for rai/mg one hundred thou- 
ſand Pounds a Month 1 the Support of 
the Army, and Navy. V. Another Aff 
for ſettling. the Militia. VI. The Houſe 
offers to ſettle Hampton Court upon the 
General aud his Heirs. VII. As alſo the 
Government. VIII. Both which be re- 
Jets." IN The Engagement vacated. X. 
XI. Some. Officers. propaſe a Declaration 
againſt Monarchy. XII. The Deſign fru 
ſtrated. XIII. Colonel Oakley's Speech for 
4 Common-wealth, without any Houſe of 
Lords. XIV. Which is. eſfectually an- 1 
faber d by Mr. Morrice. XV. The General 1 
forbids any more Affemblics of Ae 5 
without his Leave. | | A 


HILST che Pais, were earneſtly 
conſulting for the Settlement of the 
State, General Monk begins to exerciſe the au 
thority of his new Commiiſſion, in * the . 
Armies, | 


1 
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to encreaſe an 


of. And being ir 


curity 


271 
Armies, now all Alec under his Command 
And becauſe the publick Safery was fo much 


included in bis — ie 3 upon 


Colonel Philip 


a was practiſing ſome Diſtu — 
giment quarter d at Bury be ſent down Co- 


Jonel * . to a thoſe 'Thvoþs, non ga 


borongh's Regiment wh ich 1 — ai 
ad given 01 * Ge. 


houg hrs. He exte extended his 8 
of the ae remote W ent Coney! 


of Devorand Cornrws and from chence back 


| — _ —— — Wente temen f 


„ lens dr { jc 
eee Gn e ee nue, 


II. is 


—— 
down Colonel Aured and Major Smith: wich) 
3% 7 their 


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{$602 AF 3* #4. & e 1. * > 4% 86.4 
SARS: TY 7 
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Jet the 5 were reſolv'd al. 


in the Houſe, 
General to their Side, or that nothing might 


p 58-2 
a £805 


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ee eee 
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| * 0 0 a ſingle Perſon, propound 
ed to ſettle, by Act of Par 
— this Heirs, the 


Times had not 
reſerv d from their Jaws by the late Uſurper 


oben 


_ fuſe the Propoſal, | yet himſelf utrerly declin- 
dd the firſt Motion of it: But the Houſe 
E ſo far in it, they then engaged 


the Crown- Lands, yet Joe: of thoſe who had 


Jags Thongs out of the Royal:Deweſns, had 


F to preclude the Reſtoration of the King) 


WY L LIP 2 


lament, upon him 
nour and Honour of 
Court, with the Parks- and Lands 
to it; which the Villainies of thoſe 
yet ſwallowed; having been 


Cromwel, for his own Cony And 


ſtored by the < „could not decently re. 


to gratify; him ee ey © thou- 
ſand Pounds, 


vn Tao ov read * wi 2 a 2he Gift Wy 


conc in the Murder of the late 
King, and others wh had. cut themſelves 


the afidence ro famper with him about f 
ning the Government in his own Perſon. 
among the. reſt; Sir Arthur Haxlerig 


offered him one N e et cn _ __ 
1 e to his. Title. 5 
e 2 agu. 20 13, } 54 


vu lr 


Genpnat Mons. 277 


vil 1 T. emer Gam 8 en 
every" where diſcover d their) ealonſies againſt 
him, for reſtoring the K ing, ſnould nom think 

he might be perinaded ro fer up himſelf. - But . 
ſince they could not interrupt his Defiga by 
ſting che-former; they 7 kh ſecretly con- 
rived his Ruin b. the Offer of the latter. 
And they who chas officiouſly complimented 
his Advanceaninit would have been the firſt 
Rebels againſt him. But the General, who 
was immovable in his ſecret Reſolution and 
Allegiance for reſtoring the King, abhorred 
the Thoughts of this Propoſal, and gave them 
ſo doſe and poſitive an Anſwer, as he was 
reſoly d ſhould put an End to all further Ad- 
dees aan ne og, | Jan 1 AY | 
ede: 3557 Aba 14. AWOYD 5 0 
N. Tus Maud vs all this while buſy in 
ſerling the Aſſairs of the Nation for the Gon- 
renience of the ſucceeding Parliament, -and, 
among other things, about the 13 of March luareh 
they vacated the Oath called the Engugement, ** 
which about ten Vears before, was impbſed 
upon the People, and to be taken by all Mem- 
bers of Parliament before their Admiſſion to 
lt in the Houſe. But the ſolemn League and 
Covenant (the Engine or Sacrament of ſo 
T 3 _ 


many Miſchiefs) 25 


6. . wn . e 


1 1a nent and the General were managed 
| ren ua 


Houſe, the Act for Lertlig the Militia through. 


178 5 


their Houſe, 270 


| pre * read then 
o it, 15 a ſucceeding 
ry Went backward, 


name ot tne Mig on 
. e 


- 4 Par- 
with 


— een ha Wogen 


na y Caution} yer the unquiet 
Officers of the Army began to be jealons and 
apprehenſive of theit own Danger. They were 
highly alarmed with two late Votes of the 


md a Deſign to ba- 
er. of the ſtanding 


tion and e eee ary roach 
— Bait; which led be a veep 


— an Ed to 
Parliaments and People, and expoſe cheir Necks 
wer for ay Gut Ville inn mur- 


xl ou rr x as + chil had 10 
far poſſeſs d theſe diſcontented Officers, that 
toy” had , appointed e a Meeting thereup 


by the General and themſelves, and then of- 
to the Parliament. The chief Point 

whereof was, to declare againſt Monarchy, 

ey wb Gard: As or Laren but this the 


kn po ell 

3 b hi tis A- oy! un- 

0 Go ion; in ſuch manner as no 

1 page ent mau CS P 
* 


ye 19 e en nd | 


up a Declamsibh; which ha be yer 4 


nion of any ſingle Perſon under 


"hol 


* bs — — 4 52 
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it 
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— _ hs ͤ— ̃ ˙ ůù2 A RY 62 
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ir 
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280 be L 1 FE of 
hold hemſlres 3 to prote 


Jen eral wit \ this Papers deſiring, his 
3 ple | e ee, 8 ng Nev 


| al üs oWwn Diſtke [ could 
| Aa of hs 3 old ghews 6 
would. x: a generakCo 
| | fie way 5 5 flat 1 ME; 
| hes Rr Whos W. J l. 
Xn Tas Declaration of the ſedirion 
1 him. hy Ma — ad 
Sd With is us CA how to pre- 
ent the Progreſs of this, Deſign; and there 
could beſt truſt; to be; preſent, and over-rul 
Hen ad before made Mr. 1 
the 2 ; 
| Ice aud, Tempe in * 


at being a Gentleman that 


GENERAL Monx.. 28 
company of ſuch rude and clamorous Con- . 
2 Clarges.was allo di. 
2 e preſent, who, by his long Em. 14 
ploy practis d the Converſation, "BY 
c e to be run down or im- 0, 
> by [thee violent Huckſters. So 8 
hat amongſt rhoſe many extraordinary Ser- 
vices ; which th >Commiſſary had perform'd in 
all this Deſigu, the Management of this Day's 
onference Was very conſiderable, wherein he 2 80 


ded with that Reach and Dexterity, as | i 
2 the Jealouſies of thoſe Wa * | 
baffled, the He i | 


] XIII. Tun el "Moraing, being March 
Iz. a conſiderable Party of the Gen were 
ready at St. Jumer's; and Colonel Oakley, 
(who could better uſe his Sword than his 
Tongue, in Deſthce of their Common 
wealth) began 4 long and querulous Story 
of their Feats aud Jealouſies: : 7. Bar their good 
CI, ons" like 10 be left in the Lurch; 
and fuch- Defiqns. were now on Foot for 
changing. the Geverwwnent, a: "maſt necefſa- 
uy determine in ireforong the King. But, 
to.obviate theſe growing 'Evils, there was no 
they; % bur to oblige the pre efent Funcio 
an inflantly * the unalterable Con- 
Zinuance 


> 1. rr „„ 
—— —Üd 


. - av. To ITY: 1 e 


were only ima ginery; that they had talen 


e when the Nation 14 more on their Side, and 


| 
tb 3 5 * 
# \ * , 
E- 


w hinr, and ſich other Offiters, as thy 


282 The 'L1 1: T7 5 
viunance of a Free. Stare, without any Hog fo 
of Lords; or, upon their Refuſal, to take. 
wy other Methods for the "Safety of the 
Comm wealth : So great a Stateſman was 
| andler of * Billing gate * „ n 


miſſary Wespen an- 
ver d in a eloſe and well. wrought Reply: That 
their projent Jealouſits and - Approbenſins 


their e wrong, if theythought to mole 
wry Advantage of this Parliamen , byruffling 

with In had former ly' boldly with hood 
them, when they bad eſs. Tower than nn, 


tre * againſt the Government of an 
Army: T General had obliged hin. 
Fer to give the Houſe no Diſturbance in their 

Connfe uri ing their delſion; and that if be 


break his Promiſe "with them, they | 
4 "ge I Power . in their Hands to deal 


f EIS £ 3 


Centra L NM ONK. 


233 


Sen ow 329 5 te 5 rao Arodek- 
ed; 2 as for his £ 3 2 2 ſent, 


. : oh Ab . * 
1 | OLD | 2 4 
nt den A Nee ee N. * wel R 
. 0 ! . 5 * . * 1 „* ef % oe 33 & ? - 
off 1 F 0 . 2 wa 4 % Y I 4 s Rf ws 3. Aa 14 
4 * 4 * 


re i 2 on hs = 
war fon nen . ery bur an evi Un. 


. ont hit Direction. q "But during chis Confe- 
rence, 


SS Þ 


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KLE 


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eee * 7. 2 
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- 


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— —— —ů— — AG wu hv. wy Fn 
3 
—— 6 > — e 2 


„ LIFE 
] rence; he took o particular Notice of ſuch 
4 + Officers as were moſt forward and turbulent, 
. that he was reſolv d to worm them out of their 

1 Nabe Ir + agg tte Oy. : 


4 - » *, 5 1 3 * 47 J . as 1 
; Ke % s N * } 32 7 . 
ty. n 4 0 E -\ 47 © en „ "th . 
1 * 1 7 1 
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3s % * 4 — » ; 
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2 * 4 - * * * „ £ * * 1 
; 7 Ly 2 ' APY * 5 
— * > n * * N F 


1 a .: . * * 5 ; 3 
F : : 

' * 

15 1 f 

15 = | 


28 1 The We 4 Ey the Ce. 
al, po. Paving good Inclinations te. 
* wart the King. H. A remarkable In. 
3 kau of his Favour to that Party. Ill. 
A Deſign'in the Parliament to reſtore th: 
Wer 4 which obliges the General to haſten 
their Difolution. IV. To remarkable 
Votes. V. The Parliament aiſolved. VI. 
The Council of State continued : They 
_ publih a Proclamation: 2 The Army fon 
4 Engagement of Obedience. to their Ge. 
5 Royal Party quietly wait 
2 Extraordinary Pro. 
1 . Only Hr John Greenvil 
5 note refukves 70 Teen 'e hes former Com. 
| Fro, 1 oy Ring # to the 8 


THE 


„ 3 Ye - ar ES Crit. oe re” 
4 * v _—_ wie * . 


re ee 


cus Moxk. 1 255 


5 * e 70 * 
1 8 


HE thier Selon of the e ſecluded Mem- 
q "bers bal already made à very conſide- 
rable Alteration” in the late governing Inte- 
reſts; ſo that now the Presbyterian Party be- 
gan to come aloft. The General was not now 
to be taught the Tempe and Principles of the 
Presbyterians, having ſeen enough of their 
Way in thoſe Perulances between the Relo- 
lutioner and Remonſtrator in Srorland, dur- 
ing his Jong Command among them, and 
therefore had taken a juſt Length how far to 
intruſt or employ: them. He very well knew 
their Power and Intereſt in the City of Las. 
an, and that there were alſo very many Per- 
ſons among them, who, out of Hatred to the 
late Tyrannies, and Affection to the King, 
did _ paſ ſionately deſire his Rel auration, 
eſt Remedy for ſaving their Country; 

fore wide: very likely to co-operate 

with him towards his Own Lade And ob. 
ſerving how abſolurcly | this People were go- 
vem'd by their Clergy, he had receiv d ſeve- 
ral Viſits from the chief of. them, and. fre- 
quently heard ſome of them preach, eſpecial- 
ly Mr. Calamy, the St rintendent of their 
Party; with whom he fo far comply d as to 


entertain only ſuch Chaplains, to preach be- 
„„ 1 : fore 


— — — 4 
* - . - 


* of. nd 


6% Ihe? 


| foie: him every my in en Chapel at st. 


ä n means accept Dy. Pear/on;' 


ld pleaſe to ſend 


as Mr. Culump tho 
im WI hourly: contriying to poſſes 
th arent of rhe. General with the continua 
Presbyter api ae:to plant 

n bi Family's. 12 . ane dvant 


; char all ues together into the Dirt, ſo 
Wer e onen 


ache pext} The General being imd 
Perſons Werd rev 9 — would 
Though he 


* i 


3 ** Ges eee * 


the Party, ai he: Wa Gly dune l 


Gunnar Moxs 297 


%s 


vety well une 
and was perſuaded to it by 
Confident” Mr. Morrice, but "accepted of the 
presbyterian Preachers. S0 careful he was, 
eyen in this little Inſtance, not to N 


* bh * * 
. $ . * « 


m Ta HE 8 yr 1 palliared 
the Diſcontent of his Officers, * no 
further Rubs in the Current of his Affairs, 
when preſently. he found himſelf encumber d 


with a new: Trouble from che Parliament it 


{5 where ſeveral of the Mem g um 
villing to hear of a Diſſolution at the Time 
prefix d them, began, to contrive Delays. for, 
we of theix Seſſion; and foreſee- . 

V Reſtoration of the King, 
e nend their own Markets, in 
nag ame dem, who Had - firſt voted a7 


b ocedings by 2 counts/ 
urecer e I 7 


Fs 5 vent 


rſtood the Value f'the Man, 


* 2 


: — Oo. 
1 We 0 ur TH Ire ena . 
— "yp 


C C 2 
me 2 OG 8 . a * is __ aa 
4 ; 
ome IE Geo gee = en 0 wo . __—_—_—_ nr ay — 
0 0 IE 
— 4 — " 8 1 o > —_— 4 4 · 
4 
* m_ . al Fo 
„ 


— 


2 wy — 4 — 8 


. 


CER 22 


— — Bs 
OY ——— een * * 
2 — 


tation, be was enforc d to ard the Boldnef 


1 "Primer W 15 


them as un · 
n dioeto 


ng them in mind of *. by quickning 


"7 $4 a * ** , 
we, 5 1 * vhs 
1 8 6 ; at $4. 


ing P 
ee 


1 with two ſuch 


Votes a 
to the: Ni 


as 
_—_— oi Jt -- OY 


that did not 4g Anke 
5, that the lare War, raiſed by the 
in their own De⸗ 


the late King, was juſt and * 


— — ay 3 ha didn 
3 T- 


a 
$a b 


n Tae 5 
v. Arp thus having reſoly'd to make ib 
agrecahle to their 


* eee i $» FOE TO a 
"Pays, ont . 


1. n 9. bras It you. 88 eng 
DAR Katt * bar £16 W. tad) "62 if ub 


3 wag 


W W 2144 g * —— — r : k 
p- 1 —— — * * 5 » oO mu arr wee gr root we volt "6-4 eo. me +» wc 5 4% * * 5 * * ; 
* . * a mem 7 OO ro org uu wer ns s 


—— SAI rot” yt + oy 


. 
——ũ— — Ru 


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Do 


ä ts 9th; uu; * 


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7 
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+, 4 — —äẽä— ² 2 — * „ — emp — — 


- Ws |. # 
ſtructed to ſettle more eſſectually the Militia 
of the Nation,” arid to aſſiſt the General in ſe. 


ſhould” endeavour, 0 niake Parties, or raiſe 
cover or apprehend any ſuch Offenders, ſhould 


1 — of an Arm 
_-contriv'd by the General, and. fome of his 
more ſecret Council 
ſeveral Armies ſhould preſently ſign an En- 
to all the Commands of his Excellency the 


. ſent Council of State, and that they would 


0 were * TOON d from their Com- 


„ LIFE 50 


curing the Temper and Obedience of the Ar- 
my. To this End N put out a Proclama- 
fo appre g all Perſons that 


Jealouſies, among Wannen or withdraw 
them from their Duty, to the Diſturbance of 
the publick Peace. And whoever ſhould dif. 


have the Reward of ten Pgunds for their 
ins. But becauſe no Means was thought 
wal enough to bind and ſecure the Obe- 
y that had been ſo long ac- 
ifrule and Violence, it was 


iſtomed to M 


, that all Officers in the 
gagement, declaring their entire Submiſſion 


Lord General, and to the Orders of the pre. 


yield all Obedience to the Reſolutions. and 
Counſels of the ſucceeding Parliament. This 
Eng: gement was readily ſubſcrib'd by all the 
Officers of General Mon#t's s Army, and by 
moſt alſo of the others; and they who refus d 


* WT | manch 


| Gantn AL Mow, 291 
mands, which gave che General the fair Op- 


I portunity which he had o long deſir 'd, for - 
introducing ſeveral un of Honour and 

Quality into Commands in the Army, in the 
Mie of her he could 0 der truſt. 


vn Hir Aare al dungs had s ma- | 


nag d by the Power and Influence of the Par. . i 
lamentary Party, whifft the Royal Interc{t Wet! 
(that were to reap: the-ſble Advantage of the 1 | 
ſucceeding Change) having entertain d ſome 20 1] 
ſecret Hopes W ora in General Mons . 
proceedings, contented themſelves to ſit ſtill, |S 
: without raiſing” any further Jealouſies upon 
ö themſelves er him, by N further mn 75 | 
J . 10 him. ö 
of ©, 254 AF 1 12 
A | vm Om N Sir 13 Ybg Gesesdik; 6 1660 1 
| WH near Kinſman) who had, the laſt Year, þ ! 
© WI been practiſing upon the General's Alle | 
ce in Srorlund, by ſending his Brother 1 
Monk thither, of which we have given the j | 
Account before; was reſoly'd to make ſome Þ | 
further Attempt upon him, eſpecially now, 1 
oblerving him to be in a much better Capacity 2 
N — his Ends, than when he bad 
ul _— "WR him i in NE Ts 1 | 


— 
— 


. 6 
i” Mt A Gs OR eng 
* 


— 2 N 2 
* 
” * * 
- 


bol 


LSE 
2 


2 


an] als: 10 "The Getafe 
; 15 e ves Hin 


* "TL I F E P 


# 
; # Ji n +] j 1 at; 4 0 40 3 | a . 
ud 7 2 [ Ne Fa N. Tr P by 1h — P a2 7 775 15 8 Ty 4 
1 
4, 7. % John, by — of Mp Mins, 


Wi oy much. Difficulty, 'efs a Pro- 
e ference h the Ge- 
1 Sir John's" Buſineſs. Ill 

5 Jo's uli wed tb 'Fhe'General, to 
ae "he tens" B 'M efſage und Creden- 

00 eming Kur. 

re, pF 4 $5 John Ses Pre ſence of 

Mar ahd. Reſolution: V. The General 

nd his Meſſage with great 

5 indneſs.” VI. be Autors Obſer vu. 

2; _ , 16. VII. Th General declares 

7 Sir Johr, 75 the Preſenc: 


De” 


of My "Mortice./ VIII. Sir John ert 
FN ax General, from the King a great Re 
ward, tohith be refuſes: 


IN. His - | 
34 in not writing g het to the King. 
. Inſtruttions' to Sir John; upon his * 
turn to the King. XI. Sir John arrive: 
a Bruſſels, an gives the Account of bis 
Le Tul Meſſage to the General. 'Xl 
XIII. His 3 great _— any Ke 
 movul 70 ret, 5 002.) Ns ' 


#* i 


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n oy Mons. 293 
J beet be: able Pan, Vi | 
jeneral at St. James's, bu „ 
; rhe Crond of ſo many Suitors and Axren- al 
© |} — N yet meet with a vacant "Vi +] 
Opportunity of Conference with bin, cc ä 
he had ſeveral Times ſtaid late, hopi 
Retirements of 28 wonld have give | 
| dvantage to ſurpriae him 1 7 — 5 ö 
= General ve well knew his Buſigebs, 9 — the | 
I beat be thought. bis own Sration. 05 ag 1 
2 d enO 10 N his Meſlage; he 
vas xelolyed:ſtill to prevent any, Addreſs to 
bes aber ometime calling his Secretaries, 
nd refuming Buſineſs; or elſe riſing. from his 
With a G Night, Couſin, tis late, 
uud ſo retiring to his Bed- chamber. But after 
— Fraſtrations, Sir John Greenvil, — 
impatient till he had perform d bis Maj _ 
N s, Was reſolv d, ſince he could a j 
make his Way ta the General by himſelf, he — 
"ok attempt it by the: Mediation of ano- | 
ter. And) to that .purpoſe finds out Mr. 1 
Aurrice, whom be was very well known, | 
both as being ally'd:ro him, and allo a Truſtee j 
for his Eſtate, — the Diſpoſition of his Fa- 4 
an Sir Bevwil Greenvid's Will. Him he en- — 
rl Ms "Wo 3 1 5 88 0 : : 


* 

- 
3 as 
= * 

12 

— 


* 
— * | 
— _ 


* 


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A * u — * * 3 3 
* —— eee ena. — —— — — — 


* FR. : . | F , 
WOES os W 


294 

gag d to take the firſt Opn of inform. 
ning the General, that he had Buſimeſs of great 
1% and ſecret Importance to acquaint him with, 


bY intreating his *Exc ke 
EP - Favour of a privat nference.” 
. long before Mr. A a Wund en Oefen 
0 mmunicate all ibis Diſconrie to the Ge. 
1 yd: That his Couſin Green. 
. vil was ſo aden ere the Town, and ſo 
1 | noted a Royaliſt, "thavtho could Hot, with Se- 
curity or Concealment, admit him to a private 
Interview in the Head. Quarters; but that, in 
a 4 ne of ſo much Jealous Obſervation, fon 
| 1 rehenſions w ονd be raiſed from it. He 
LEES IT therefore: Heſired: Mr Morrice to go to Sir 
q "Fohm- Greeuvil in his Lame, witrh Aſſurance, 
| that he had given him full Truſt to hear his 
"ſecret Buſineſs, and that hy him hei ſhould alſo 
receive the Ger eral's: Anſwer Mr. Morrice 
preſent! y acquainted Sir Jobn Greenvil, at | 
his 'own' Houſe-in Covent: Garden, with this 
Direction from the General; who utterly re. 
fus d to cem mann his Buſineſs to any o. 
ther Perſon except his Excellency himfelt. 
But the General was ſo little duriahy'd with 
3 this Anſwer, that he aſterwards ſent M. 
A Morrice back again, more earneſtly deſiring 
; him that he would truſt him with the Convey- 
ance 


— | 


I — — af bis Kit 
man; for now he found he was to dealh with 


GENERAL Monk. - as 
ance of this ſecret, Affair. / But Sir John was 


fill reſolvd to treat _ with the General, 
ugh he had ſecurely intruſted Mr. 


no Man bur himſelf-i — a 


ys men. ene at; 


Evening he would give him a Meeting in Mr. 


neee Nic FOOTER ech 


4 


1 211 15 1 Is ELD? 29 41 


0 Ir:canmay beimeginth bur ahh General 
very well-knew Sir John Greewul could have 


no other Buſineſs with him of ſo much Se- 


5 cee, but what he had before begun in Ccut- 
thoughe 5 would ſo much con- 


tion; nor can it be 


cm n himſelf ren 0 ſo many W 


rr wg * „ aan * r 


r truſt 


aa an e bot High: 8 "ns eee 


— 


TE or ft te wt 
* 
— 


* 
. . * N _ A - * 
r ones gr 3. 
r r — „ 


D N 
1 2 20 


e 


—— TFESOY * 


to be told that which be had no Mind , 


V2 
„ 
* . 


5 „ had done] Na giving —— this oper 


P AAS" 
*** 


bear. [4h VI ute ern N 


1 25 wy 5 en 45 _ . A 161-10 


ming 
Chamber, where he found Mr. — 
preſently; after. the General, by a Back Su 
. : entered the Room at another Door. So ſoon 


3 be had, falured each other, Mr. Morric, 


it co be an Interview of Secrecy, 
0 dan, reſolxing to ſecure the , 


Upon 


WV 1 ty O0 ciſcharge a Truſt, which Hor 2 — le. 


qi main d in his Hands, and was of ſo great Con- 


8 — = — — cad 1 . 
—————— . "ue 3: wart Said 4 tn 
— 2 5 Ee — 


it cernment both to his Excellency, and alſo to 


the Beans Maney: FOR — he had been 


* le wear wit hm 


i . | * 
. 8 K 797 9.4 4 1 


by) 
this Buſt- 


I. Tur 


— 


— — 
9 
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—ͤ 1 ́——-—ſ—æ „66 „%é 
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„ rea ue zes, E —— Ne 
ture, without — corgve_ rhe — a 2 the 


| Afri "and Teel. towards vis Ser- 


e 1 80 . dee LAT eee t 
+ n J * 4 *\ 


Aten, 1. 


* but wich ſome Faſſioh (like that of 
* oo to his dee he embraced his Cou- 


tis —— Let r to him? 7 "which he did 
more gladiy receive from his Hands, being 
his neareſt Kinſman, and a Deſcendant of the 
Family. to Which, he. owed ſo many Obliga- 


#55; , IG tions. 


7 WT bow ro t 


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HOO I i i err SA OI ayer ot ou oo Apo ns on 92 Oh 194 


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£0) be raked ins 4 B 


e A was 0 wh Ad Yin 


n I. Meer — A Poin 


ankle e rd th gxebt and flaftrons 


| Lees, nd: look'd over Sir 


of a Diamond, that che famg General Moy, 


who was naturally ſo wary and conſiderate, 

that he would find Ways to deliberate upon 

the leaſt ſudden W him, yet 
t Affair rhe firſt 


entertain d preſently chis 


PING it was offer d him. 8⁰ congenial and 


eee Gers 


Perſon as a kind of / Properdy led on by the 
Conduct of others, may here meet their own 
ion: For though n Man knew bet 


ter than himſelf, how to make uſe of thoſe 3 


bout him yet in this great Concerriment, 
[which was the moſt nice and tendereſt Part of 


f Pee eſ 'heiadviss wo gen of then 


4. * hy Ert + 7 160 17 9 ry i # w 11.3 # 


vn. TE General dees his Majeſty 
ba Erteuvils 


Eo» ommiſſion, 


* . 


To given „ 2 0% bir Letrer) f 1 
cans «Pardo _ altos . — 4 
1 ad [itt 4 2 — 5 
vice, when ever be ſhould be in a Condition 
#41 attempt it; uuta which h had nun in 
fime good Maclaren. arrived, through mani- 
fats 4 %% 6714: DiJapporntiaents 3 2 
ing teſobued; to endeavour this Majeſty's. Re- 
ſauration weithithe Hazard of ibis d Life 
and Fortunes): And, that there might be fur- 
ther Witneſs of theſe Reſolutions, he would 
call that honeſt Man from the Door. Mr. 
Morrice was accordingly ealld — 
mie aſl ed:ther 
3 Denen n 
VIII. Sogn — — -acquaiated 
General, that he ja en om bis de 2X 
Pounds per — be annually poles him 
Honour he ſhould chuſe for himſelf. together 
with che Qfler uf Lord. High:Conſtable. af. 
ttt 1 Eng land 


{ ON) , 


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1 * en W . 12 - * 

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ren "he" wits whotlyrroſolo'd into. the 2 
er ge eee Wia on! 


2912 Dürr * 
; envil then * the 


Selling him, Thar bs had nbuc — 
him Sher as yer he could truſt with ſuch 
Ferret And chough Sir Fohw mentioned the 
Names of ſome pe articular. Perſons about him, 
a re for ent, to adventure 
A Letter to his N 


eſty, which; if it ſhould 

en by any Accident to be intercepted, 
would raiſe fuck Jealouſi es and Apprehenſion: 
my, ( not yet fully wrought to his 
le hardly ever be again in 

Power ro compoſè them. Hie therefore 

" defiriSir John eee 
the CO — his 3 to 

ſince 


end durchs — esl believe his 
own Agent, though he brought no Letter, af 


Credence. Sin Johm Greenvil then told the 
General, that he would begin his Jaumep to | 


the King che next Evening. who thereup 
pers. to meet him again the following 
Day in the ſame W ere ſhould re- 
ove ww Inftractions. SURE 


i tran HARE a ate 1 31 


X. Tur neut Byeniog Sie WF Greenvil 


ended a General in Mr Morrice sCham- 


ber; where his Excellency deſir d him to take 


bis nun in _— the Heads whereof 


© 92 1 * *. % | 
98 * * W. N | Nane * "Y \ 1 


tar ſinee by the long Cinil War and 


Change of Government, the Minds of the 
Soldiers in general, and a great Part of the 


e People; would be alarm'd with the Appre- 


henſion of his Majeſty s Return, it Was his 
* | — he. would be graci- 


rr 


tal, Pardon to, all his Subjects, excnph to 
nuch as the Parliament ſhould eſtęem inca- 
pable of it. That he would prepare the 
16) — che Army, by declaring his Rea- 


eat ro ſuch AA a thould T. = 


cure 


1 - 
5 
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— Sos 4 2 — en AA 1— " 
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0 declare his Aſſent for a 


CY - «> hr i 


4 Lade, 5 = m— alſo of their Ar. 
«<, rears: And dec uſe nothing Was more like- 
ec ly to run the People into Frenzies, than 
the Fear of Reſtraint in their ſeveral Reli. 
<<. gjons;; he did further beſoch his Majeſty 
oleration and 
64 — of Conſcience to all his Subjects, 
< who ſhould ſo employ it as not to give any 


ec Diſturbance to the Civil Government. He 


„was alſo inſtructed to deſire his Majeſty to 


cc. retire from the - : ninions ..of the King 
of Spain into ſome: comyenicur Place be- 


L longing! to the States of the united Pro- 
„ yinces, where, with more Freedom and Se- 


cc curity to his Perſon, he might treat further 


+ Sh watt his Parliament and Pau And laſt- 
« his Majeſty any ene, 


10 a not to give 
ion, by offering 
5 e to him for the Reward of his 


Service. The General deſir d him to per- 
uſe there his Inſtrudtions —— and to ſe. 
vg hat Pa 


_ the Fire before them, and intreated him 

to keep cheſe — his Thoughts as 
be travelled, and by no moans to commit 
n to un. he was firſt; ar. 


riy d 


ON EAI Mons. 303 
id in Mines ben to acquaint any Per- 


en with his Buſineſs except his Majeſty only. 


They then privately took Leave of each o- 
ther; 2 the — Night Sir 2 uten 
— journey rows; Dover, aber. the next 


quaintance Sir John Greenvit, and engage 
together in the King 
their Voyage to Oftend,: they knew nothing 


of one another s Buſineſs. When they came 


to Bruſſels, the Lord Mordant reſolvd to 
go directly to the Court, and Sir Jobm Green- 
vil to his Lodgings; deſiring his Lordſhip to 
acquaint the King, that he was come 80 
en and mh nee e bee 


LID e 


XI. ke Ciba his 8 was Bae 


of Sir Jom Greeuvilis Arrival, he expected 


from him ſome extraordinary News from 


England; es the rather becauſe he came not ; 


to Court, but retir' d himſelf ſo privately. 
The ſame Night therefore his Majeſty went 
alone-in his Coach to his Lodgings, where, 


—— hs ets he e his Majeſty a 


diſtinct 


tl ener 10 the. King, and 
had- bired 4 : Veſſel to himſelf, in which he 
was very joyfal to accommodate His old Ac- 


Service; but in all $7 


234K * 


bt of 
— EE. * 2 
— aww » — * — ur Rs 


„ 


4 
2 
* . 5 
* ok 1 9 
— 
1 2 


ww 


we, 


ocodings with" Genera Mont ;" with wha 
Readineſs he had embracd his Maj t 
vice, and with what Care and Prudence he 


: 
$ 
1 
1 
11 


neral Mons Deſire, in managing 
Affair by themſelves alone, without admit; 


* S 
4 ; 2 
—— 2 
PPTP a nn mn — he . as wad 
5 4 vm, — CTY 
1 4 1 „ * 
* 
1 - 


kind of JOY 


15 * * i \ 9 
925 Nh: 16 ; 74 9 
- ” I N 1 7 . 
| ' a ! 
- 1 


u. LIFE of 


y-$ Ser- 


had run through a thouſand Difficulties and 
Difappointments to arrive at his preſent Sta- 


tion; and by which he hop'd he ſhould be 2. 
ble to accompliſh his Majeſty's Reſtauration. 


He then deſcended to the Relation of thoſe 
private Inſtructions he had receiv d from the 
General; which, when his Majeſty had further 
conſidered and debated with Sir John Greenvil, 


they found it impoſſible to comply with Ge-. 
ng this ſecret 


ting ſome others to a Share in their Counſels. 


And therefore his Majeſty reſolv'd that, the 


next Day, the uiſs of Ormond, the 


Lord Chancellor Hide, and Sir Edward NM. 


6holas, ſhould be en with it; who 


accordingly. attended his Majeſty privately, 


together with Sir John Greenvil, and re- 
ceived this News' from General Monk with.: a 
iz . 


7 


13 bis Majeſty: . to en 
tertain ſome nearer Hopes of recovering the 
Throne of his — than he had done 


by 


2 


oN 


by thoſe former Attempts, vhich' had beeti 
rg for him in Engla: | 
was 4 Method that had never yet deen 
0. and the Conduct of, ir Was in the 
Hands EET ry and 1 1 Man, that Mes 
ed no ence and pur to & thro! 
with 52k Nor did his Maje 90 d the honeu- 
fable Counſellors forget to reflect upon the 
extraordinary, Service of Sir Jeb 8 Teen vil, 
with what Fains and Iaduſtry, through how 
many Daggets 8 and F Exe 0 
on ix ſecret Fil for alm oft three Quarters 
of a Year, and had at 1a 10 nappt / Con 
uced it with the General. eee avs 


88 


ALL A 0 bis Coter ence it Was relbly' 
o purſue the well adyiſed Counſel f om Ge- 
neral l, for the re ao ving of hi Majeſty 


out of the 1 aniſh Territories. And accor- 
dingly ſome few Days aſter he went privately 
to Breda, where he ſettled his Court; and 
in this Place Were made ready all thoſe Pack- 
ets and Diſpatches, which Sir " John Greenvil 
was to carry back into England. ADeclara- 


tion was alſo formed and 7 igned by the King, 


| ' thoſe Toy is "which! the 
| General had proppsd e 2 oſt Mons to 


Si 65 erte „ 16 eee: 
5; c H AP. 


containing : 


75 ak Mob. . 305 


and or Set land "For 


* 3 — — — ia thenes, pr eret EE 
, „ . * — 5 * 
4 


— 


B 225 the Ring 75 Inftruttivhs. V. 


Sir John Greenvil hereuponi; ; Who role him) 


Bel of for ehh rien, 
15785 a Falera, * 225 

ank bY Some of 
f ave for pos ven 
Terms upon the Ring „ it 
for dtibn. III. They ug 4 
1 125 4% thut purpoſe, and. 
Ace | as compl img with 
ds John Gr tt returns t 


What paſſed bet l- the General and hin 
or his Return. VI. The Election for 4 
e Par liment. VII An Thſurrettim.. 
VHH. Lambert e/tp ds; and joins them in 

- Pro ſhite. IX. The Geternt reſobues 

* Ottdſion Jhbit14 he, to publiſß the King" 

Dig „ hd 4 ire openty for him 

Lanbert is then Priſoner, an 

Sebel xg 7 the e, 


N | 


7 166k "_—_ Care 4 
f his own Affairs 

is beſt” ebBAderiph How tb xewatd the 
Service of the Gehetdl, 4nd was adviſing with 


he 


„ 


« rfl 55 0 — ng ho this 
——— that he ſhould move 
eee ent eee | 


» hs bundle. Advice to his Majeſty, bu in- 
termit, for the preſent, the Care thereof till 
his own happy Arrival into Eng land. Wheve- 
fore at preſent; his Majeſty only commanded 
à Commiſſion to be drawn up f for General 


, to command as Captain General over 
3 all che Forces of England, Scotlaud, and Ire- 
!. and; which was ſign'd by him, and put up 
1 with a private Letter to him from his Maje- 


ſty, written with his own Hand. There was 
ao another Letter directed: Ta our truſy 
and well-belowed Genera! Monk, #0 be by 
him communicated to the Preſident of* the 
Conneil f State, and 10 the Officers 

Armies under his Command, with. a Copy 


ef che forementioned Declaration: encloſed. 
is, WI And becauſe the new and auſpicious Parlia- 


ment (upon whoſe Counſels — Hopes both 
af the King and People did ſo much depend) 
Vere  fuddenby to meet, Letters were drawn 

. 2 „ oa 


P FO 


. 
” 
N «„ * 
* 7 * 4 ww: = TI. eo oy 
0 - 27 — 
* 9 4 
. — 5 1 


zen 7e LIFE fd 


. rr x 
OR _—_ 


75 of - aur 1 City of * London. 2 In the . Contents 


Eng land, where all Parties were excceding 


rent Addreſſes from thoſe who were curious 


; 48 their oWn. But 3 _ the rel 


to he delivered at their Adably. by Lit 
Jobs Creenvil, directed: by the King: 7 
our truſty and right well-beloved the Speaker 
of the'Houfe of Lordi: And another, To our 
triſty and well-beloved the Speaker of the 
Houſe of Commons. In both which were allo 
_ Copies of his Majeſty's fore-mentioned Deck. 
ration inclos d. There was alſo a Letter di 
rectedd: To our truſty and uell. beloved the 


Lord Mayor, Aldermen, and Common Council 


whereof the Lord Mordant, who was allo to 
return with Sir 7h Green vil, was menti- 
oned. And another to General Mon b, and 
General — ay to obe Wan them commu 
one” to the men! 1 

OY Bur whilſt the; e are mali 
T Sealy at Breda, we will return a while into | 


buſy in the Purſuit of their particular Inte. 
reſts, upon the Proſpect of this great Revolt 
tion, which ſome of them hop'd for, and o- 
thers equally fear'd: So that General Mon! 
was perpetually beſet with many and diſe 


to diſcover his Senſe and Inclination, Or (0 
there 


AL\MONK. — fg 
| him by — 3 
of bb A666 5 Who perſuaded hi 
that if the next Seſſion ſhould reſolve upon 
_ reſtoring the ancient Government, and bring 
home the King, yet his Return ſhould not 


2 


) be ſafely admitted but upon the ſame Ar- 
2 ticles which, twelve "Years: before, had been 
b offer d to his Father in his laſt and greateſt 


Extremity in the Iſle of Might, and would 
have made him no better than Magui Nomi- 
gi Umbra. By which 2 the Mi- 


0 litia of the Kingdom, with the Diſpoſal of all 
i- Places of Truſt, and all Officers, — have 


continud in the Hands of the Parliament; 
and the Presbyterian Government to be eſta- 
bliſh'd.at-leaſt for three Years, with the fair 
Probabilities of a longer: Leaſe; and his moſt 


02 WI faithful Servants. to be dealt with as Delin- 
c quents: So that, upon theſe Terms, the Par- 
im liament would not have been leſs Maſters than 


2 nor his Majeſty. a VR Nr We 


| 0- 8 34 ' | my | | | 
on £ iI. Tur Benet — . e ya away 
* Sir John Creenvii —— to his Maj eſty 


with Aſſurance of his Allegiance, and Reſo- 


an for his Seryice. without the mentian 


„ * 


. Vande was to 


|: 


225 rr ante t Anme 


1 + 
z J » * y * | N 8 * 5 : * » 5 
5 5 | E ö a 5 * 7 


Fy . , A Fo 


ef uny Limttarion, wus ſomew hat concemd 
ED to mute good Work with 'theſe Gentle. 
men. Nor were they ordinary People, but 


Tome of chem Perſons ar Quality, {and all of 
them Men vf Parts and Eminency among the 
Purties Where they ſway'd : So that the Ge- 
*neral [thought it amoſt ſafe at preſent to enter · 
tam them with ſome Appearance of his Con- 
Tent; and ihaving (as they thought) thus fa- 
end the — upon him, their next Contri- 
Peſect his Juggle with the 
King. Tothat ſe a Letrerwas ſent to 
im, relating Their earneſt 'Defires aud En. 
« for his Renum; and that to that 
Eu they had held fo verul 'Treaties with 
Gtneral Monk, ehe cuuld not be prevail u 
2h ro cum ſont td hir Neſlanrat ion, other. 
1494/e than upon hit Father's" Conceſſions in 


-phe Iſte of Wight ; beſpechimg is Majeſty t 


-areept | they, "rather than, by bis : farther 


Refuſal, 60 hazard u roru! Exoluſin fro: 


Bis Croran and "Kingdom. This Letter was 
deliver d to his Majefty«whilftSir Jabn Green 

vil was attending upon him, to whom it was 

—— ſhown: But, upon further :deliberating 
among themſelyes, the Arrifice: was-.quickly 

- diſcovertd;>fo-that! his Majeſty-pteaſancly're- 


that 


ON: ao ers 2311 
that Sore e eee. 
1 ae 97 I in, Geegn 


= eir 5 
wen Fr e ae at 
implacable;Bemics.to Him-. 


Fo 8 
Dark 1 0 hog 
* 


21 - \7 3 rpg 
| Generale. 0 St. J 36 12 e . 
Bs Math ones gr ritten 


* 
FORT * 


A nn nn | 5 
* h dk anne. a ** — =. 
1 % A SH Ub 1 <8 « 
2 1 . 2 Fr . 


be. 1 2 e e L P 5 E of 
Letter, and kept it with him; : but, for the pre- 
ſent, he would not truſt bis own Cabinet 
with the Commiſſion ; Which was therefore 
deliver d back to Sir John Grrenvil, who ſe. 
cur d it in a priyate Place in che Floor of his 
ed. chamber, where he had usd to lay up 
Letters and Commiſſions from "the Kino ; 
where alſo this lay till after the King's Re. 
turn, and was then deliver'd to the General. 
And for thoſe other Letters, it was here re- 
ſolv'd, that Sir John Erernvil ſhould keep 
them privately till the opening of the Parlia- 
ment, and then deliver them according to his 
Inſtructions. The General alſo kg delibe- 
rated with Sir John Greenvil, about the Dil. 
poſal of his Mazeſty's 8 Seal and Signet; where 
it was agreed, that, in regard Mr. Norric 
was the only Perſon that had been privy to 
Ye ſecret Affair, and had ſo faithfully aft 
ed therein, they would recommend him to 
the Truſt: Which, ſo ſoon as the King re. 
turned, was accordingly done by the General, 
When, at the ſame Time, his Excellency was 
offer d ten thouſand Pounds to procure the 
Place for another. And now, for the pre. 
ſent, all Interviews between the General and 
Sir Fohn «ron were but #lgom, and al- 
Ways art e 


PE VI. ALL 


the approae] chil ing: Pa — bar with ſo hule 


late turn'd eve: 


9 


| JE NERAL. Mo! ux. 3 73, 


Regard to thoſe Qualifications appointed by 
the former Aſſembly, that no Man ever took 
Notice of them. The Presbyterians were ve 

ſtrious for the introducing again Men 

of mer own Party; but were ſucceſsfull 

[ors by the Royal Intereſt, which 3 at 

Time began to appear, yet: with great 

ane aufer“ And the People 

the Memory of their paſt Miſeries) 

were gener yd adverſe to that ſort of Men, 

thr few of them found theis wow into pans 
ny Parlament. GOL h ‚ ffn 

VII. Wnosb Seſſion! v was now _ IOW os” 
Cesena Monk (having already fo ſucceſsfully 
enter d into a Treuty 8 his Majeſty) be- 
gan to entertain himſelf with the Approach 
of his own and the Kingdom's Safety: Till, 
on a ſudden; he was furpriz'd with the worſt 
and laſt of his Encumbrances, being the ex- 


piring and foul Effect of the fapatick Rage: 


For the deſperate Orew of — 
ther miſchievous Male. contents, having of 
y Stone in vain; and, finding 
| "—__ 


—ͤ—j́— — 2 —— 


ä„s—üQ—UU— ————42Ä˖ꝛn m2 6 gn eye 4 oo oO $44 


——_——_ —_ 


Guards. So ſoon as;he-was.£lc: 


carefully 


Miibution of Fleetzwod's 
ed wire his Fo I Toy 


| ee 


, oe 1 = 1 as cop gor maile choſe Je- 
Jouſies Seeder ws , As:they had 
atten — MOSS nk — 


"V0. Bur, ro b = | 
"Eſcape rer, — — quick 


55 alter effected, by the Treachery f two or 


—— common Soldiers in Galonsl Aeg 


neral had ſpeedy Notice of it, and * he 
was. louged, ſo that he miſs d him very / nat. 
\gowly. And the the Search aſter him 33s | 
continued, yet he heard no more of 
cchim til R Colonel —— —-— 
iments at Northamptn) 


che fut KRenount of him: 
Sealed abet of dhe Oityss a8 n good 
then .quieklycleft the Town 


haſten d rowrards rfargnohſeire ; ; = 


Wo b 


: Sg Mos. 2 


de 
th Rags of he Engheſh: Apis ee. 


. 

d uin e 1 

h 2 to him.” Upon this News; She) Goreral 

h preſently diſpatch d away Colonel Ingoldsby, 

d with his Regiment af Horſe quartoring in 

d ald, to Haſten through Cunmmidge tn 
 Northenipton, and there Jain axith Colonel 


Streater, and muſue Lanibent auhete· ever: lie 


after, 0 4 


* prevent the Motions of any other Forces, 
or quarter'd:in thole; Countries, from _ 
y's 1 me en COMET: wh 


alſo for Sir Jan. 


20 nand, upon pri- 


25 
— nokir. inighribe thenl luc iof i this 


es 


Army ſbauld re uoli frum 


allt Nya? Narty vf the rùmes Netrons in 
1%. Arms, rar her than Haber abel Nami 
aud Hairehruimid Jecturies to Lt h- 
AY * bus to be always 


an 


couldi be. heard: of, and mate Forces wererſent 
ianded' by Colonci Hoa, u 


N. rade e 45 | 
ware! Conference writhchim, teldrhim, Ir was 


Iufurrettdon,. * te as mt preſently. 


hin. Mut thut *be "wonkd frmbbifÞi his- Cum. 
No fromthe Min g, unil by it au rate 


fam bim, which ſhould he rommu 
| N. FE —=— 5 ee, A "FE 4 * L q 


* 


1 dE Htths: I: 


adineſs' for e Wee Orders 


N. Dae e Th gold hid, 10 fori dr Dig 
N got his Regiment together, and arrivd 
ar Northampton by Saturday Night, where 
he found a good Txoop of Gentlemen, and o. 


ters, whom the Earl of Keton had — 
in to che Affi 


x a A 1 | : 
7 5 1. 1 2 1 bo 6. 10 } 7 OF Fn 81 | A 1 ; 


ning att; bein 
Eaſter- Day; the Scouts brought in News 
where Lambert was; and accordingly the 
Forces were drawn out to follow him, and 
found him near Daventry," having drawn out 
his Men in an open plow d Field: he Force 
with him was but ſmall, being only ſeven 
broken Troops and a Foot Company. Colo- 


nel Okey 2 finding the Buſineſs would not 


be done by sing / at St. James's; and (ob- 
bet, whom we left laſt in Edeubusgh Caſtle, 
had found their Way thither, ones, + with 
Colonel Autel, and ſome few Captains. The 
Forces having fac d each other for four Hours, 


. not greatly inclin'd to a Combat, bar. 


E TY Mott. 37 
ing ſpent moſt; of the Time in Meſſ ages and 


parties, till Colonel Ing goldoby * and 


commanded. to fire upon them. Whereupon 


Lambert's Party were ſo irreſokure and unwil- 


ling to endure the Charge, as ſome of them 

came over to Iuguldeby, and the reſt fled, and 
the Commanders began preſently to ſhift a- 
way for themſelves. But Colonel Ingoldbys 
had his Eye ſtill upon Lambert, and came 
up ſo cloſely, that he took him Priſoner; nor 


would he ag preyail'd. with to connive at his 


Eſcape, tho 3 of them offer d themſelves 
Priſoners in his ſtead.” Cobber allo and Creed 
| were here taken with better Luck than Ax- 
tel and Oley, who eſcaped; but not long af- 


tet were brought to another reckoning. Lam- 
bert, Cobbet, and Greed were preſently car- 


ry d off with a Guard, and on Eafter Tue fg 
day were brought to London, and ſecured a- 
gain in the Tower. And thus was this little 
Cloud ſeaſonably diſpers d, which otherwiſe 


might have brought upon the Nation the | 


Lets of anche AR War. 


g : * n 
0 . wy - 
ha » * 
L ” ; " « 1 5 
of ty „ N * ” 5 
«4 3 2 ENS 2 . 
' vs 3 5 5 + 
* 7 » : 1 1 424 4 K 4 0 
wp 1 ” 
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* 
1 * 


— ” * 4 
5 * —_ 
24 =" 8 


3 
Z 
x 
$ 
\ 
| 
1 
1 
1 


om n- iT LIFE.o 


155167 


" 7 * 
— 3s BE £ 48 . 
. 


The Gef air Sens WS jy 


* 
* 7 


hir noc Infarvettion.' II. Before tha 
Supprefſion' of which he dy 


{21 


wy 
5 


i Auſwve+ mu ine from bis\Majeſty. 
-& : The 70e rer For uus dueſ+ of rte Sar, 
** rs to reſtors the Miug. 

ge diſcourages.” 4 a5 The rer Le! wh 


Practicer c the old vebellions Party, in 


bruer 1 A rate the Generat's De/ons 

VI. The new Dar lament” "meets, and 

thanks the General fur bir C 

Ae, vin Nene, ks: of the Author upon 
he Generals Procecdings. VIII. The 
Ning Derter to the Councit of State di. 
Nerd 70 the Parliament by Sir John 
Steed. 1X. A Moria for 
- mitment of Sir John, which the General 
9 12 mtr þ fr. bis 1 885 
ace. 


EF : * | * „ ch 
4; We | 4 #sp * 4 we > , 4 1 


I. HE Gaal! — Jul at the 


ſpeedy and Acer" Suppreſſion of 1 


Lambert and his Party, ſuſpecting the Eng- 


« iſh Army would preſently have fallen off to 


him: For Sar he had always a very ordi- 


nary Opinion of Lambert J Conduct, om he 
| new 


2 and Con 


the Cum. 


4 Monk. ” 5719 
knew — 1 Officers with hirn, eſpe- 
1 were n 1 d daring 


copy 44 1 hot ſeem over-torward at preſent 
19j0in in this new tempr. They had late- 

male by following the Paſſions 
sf their + Offi, and were now well 2 


den Cate for — rt. | Thoſe Reg 
ments alſo which Lambert had the laſt Year 
wheedted- into the North, had no Stomach = 
to dance after his Pipe into fach another Miſ- 
the ſame Army, and the ſame General, that 
had baffled them before. Nor was the Ge- 
netal leſs fortunate in the Choice of Colonel 
Iigolueiy for this Service; who; beſides his 
faithfulneſs to the General, was excecdingly 

beloy'd by a great Part of the Enemmy's Army, 
vo would Bot — readily drawn to engage 
inſt him; and had alſo Atmung 2 War , 


ken _—_ ro the beſt o of dl 


n. we Res 4 given - Adonis of his 
RE * 


2 


i. 6 que 


320 The LIFE. 0 
* Majeſty s Letter to the Gencgall hic w was | 


brought to him: by Sir Jobn n cen⁰h⁰i; 'to 


which the General was ſo cuncern d to retum 


his Anſwer, with further Aſſurance of his 
Duty and Faithfulneſs to his Majeſty” $;Ser- 


vice, that he would not « defer 15 till the Con« 


tions. but, before 
the Effect of 


cluſion of Lambert 8 Inſurre 
ever he knew what would b 


this Man's Miſchief, or whether. he might be 


able to make good his Word, he r d.to 


write back to his Majeſty; and becauſe Sir 
John Greenvih, who was to be ready at the 
opening of the Parliament now at Hand, 
could not be ſpar'd from that Attendance, 
that this ſecret Truſt might ſtill be continued 
in the Family, the — ſent his Letter by 


Mr. Bernard neee a 5 dunger Brother 


1 4 


0 — » 

ol * 3 . — * 
9 5 
Y. L . N # *** 


m. n ene 


faſt i in the Tower, and his Party A de. 
feated, to the utter Ruin and Fruſtration of 


that Intereſt, che General * no more to do, 


but to diſcharge a great Part of his Care into 
the Boſom of the approaching Parliament, 
which now, within very few Days, was to fit 


down. But, before their Meeting, he was 


n with an . and n 
able 


* a. 


tt Moi. 325 


u — —— 


eatrieſt wit kh his Ereelleney 
Counſels of the” Parliament, and aſſume the 
Glory and Advantage of che Action to him- 


an oblige'his Maj 


feſt of the Officers, and the whale / 
CARA the L _—__ ads £5254 | 
as Oiriie 03 2 570 er n nee 
' BU the Gull, who had otherwiſe, 
ol d, aid lik d his owti Methods as moſ 
life and hononrable, calmly declin'd the Pro- 
pofal;* rellitig 1 They had before declared 
their Reſolution 75 keep the Military Power 
in Obediener to the Civil; and that lately 
| they / had 575 ge themſebues, their —_ 
ſerip ſubmit to the . Reſolutions '0 
this” ap Bing Parliament , both — 4 


iS 


Obligations wwould be eng go ly JO. 


2 


e oy Jew. an _ 7 


* 


1 J q 8 3 fax - 
. 4. 5 44 z 1 a 


3 

1 

WW 1 
% 


i Ya Aly? now 10 W pen Bal ey any 
ways appear ag the Generals Proceed- 
ings: But, whare-thd deſperate and ſeditious 
dere Prevetited'i in their publick Confederacies 

70 4 againſt 


o 9 
4 ©, 
þ * 


8 V ;% 


Es 


tion; were very y 
to anticipate tlie 


e to engage the 0 


| 


PREG * N 


HET ˙ Boe rr — Va 2, 5% 


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\ 


ings by ſcorer Milchiiefs, te ſcatter” Jealouſies 


— — — — 1 Sa R 
PPP * 
* , _ 3 — » * 


_ dence; and that all th 


bers 0 0 


: mn they were babs upon a cher dl 


F 0 Roe his n bats We 


2  COntriy. 


and Suſpi ions among the Soldiers And, co | 

lat And, ſeveral villainous Libels -agaibſt the 
King and the Royal Party were dilperled 1 
A . m_— mer Pra 


— that Mr, nary — h 
of him in the General's O 
— 


his Connlels, Ho'thet il ch — 2 were Teſtor 


Ghoty of the Alas: Rudd 68, uin Mir. Ad 
vict, it was wWhiſper d, chat be arr 
ed of che er N to.the 


%. 


hoods of thoſe ſe People, evented the evil! 
fect of their Deſigns. Vet cheſt rebelliow 
and ſedivious - — 2 oy: had 0 


over the Experimen ki Far, W. 
Brethren 


7 


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——— —„—y᷑— 


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5 5 ww ByT now thong? of; pr. ibeing come 
aſſe alſembled at Weſtmi 


ile nite bas thevoh thy 
Re not n byrthe Royal, Author 


x 


- SB 


t he 
Deere hot 4 77 5 one cn 
. der eas {can was elected by a 
double Return, both. from che(Lniyerſiry of 
8 ge, 3nd 5 0 


— 5 


a Devon; 14 but, 


— — — 50 
-publick Acknoy- 

ments OL MIS, pm nag and Faithful. Ser 

| Tice in pa the. Pears of the Common 
Mealt . elle 


Privilege. gr alt 
MM with, Lib erty 


eee aſe 
7 Cotttemplition & of N Ars 


FE wh 4 
THF N 1 144 1 L 3 $4 4 1 1 77 4 Un p 


Mea one* Tre 
gradual and eaſy St 
hi Alcliarion: 4 made ſtole upon the P 
© fenfibH ax the leiig chirig of the Di 
Changes of the Year and Sealotis: 
cubeste 2 mioſt pla fible Prerence of opp 

g the knckel Extravagan e Ten 
F deck — 5 


Furies 


* N 7 


Leer din Made de "ured — 
harten, never 70 riſe more, which 


0 Ut immortal King 


X 


r a be ror Selen 10 chat he bad now 

eg dee Kees to ma a 
Hf pod FE BST UDO URI) 
"Bythe like Gr: 5 55 he probeeddiÞ 
is armes, When he firſt 
2h in Seo lara, he cleared his Hands 
from al” his his Aflabaptiſts, by the 8 
8 0 


. 


endabornbet alli 10 
upon the'General's Proceed: 


eo le 


. 
— on 
al 
9 


ny 


3 
$ 2. 
Pe ty Or 9 I WIE 


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ap Re rn k hx — rr nas rr hte 
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RY 


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rr 


Is and, Conferences between 


rhere Sie John Greewoel” rol him, 
etters te him from the King, Which 


nd che re Was ſo 3 


ſome Surprizab at his Buſinefs. He then de. 
| tid r: oP there till he receiv d his An- 
ſer, an don imanded his Guards to look af- 
e him. The General then carried the Ler- 


1 . 8. 
» 3 * 72 
3 1.40PM He 
% * g 
A * V 7 
* 4 * — 6 
Council r and de- 
| N , 
2 4 >. oy | 
; * "=; 
: 1 1 bis 


Fi — whenes the Letter came.” . 
113 5574. 20 829015 71 Are, # | 

R. Tus 00 
nase cheſe 


erg, fell into an earneſt 


> abQu ny Bb char Colonel Birch 


that u this Buſineſs 


the Melſage to him, nor, any thing of his 
| Bueſe, And without doubt he was beliey'd 
by thoſe that heard him. It was then reſoly- 
ed; that the; Letter ſhould not be open d till 
5 again, which was then ad- 
Es ; Journ d 


+ rx NERAL: Moxs. 327 
0 » the Genie , his Excellency eame to the 


ho 5 2 ra bis Hand-in Sight of the 


ODS 3 Pens ad; with 


5 ci being pris d with the 


b 3 That * 
w d, (00 een that lle 


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iamigd han finly about: che I 
| Wi to-which Sir. 3, "ao fe. 


: wich Git ious. Tln, ” 5 
Till che Parliament \hould e Waren 
£5 then —— 


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Fir John. G ecnyil., / VI. "The. Fee 
. nd Sir John, 70 | the King. with their Ar. 
we" bas 2 * 2 5 VII. General Moun- 
ue e Arecsed to,carry the Fleet to the 
A Sir. John Greenvil's 
Breda, * 3 4 , hs 1 a from 
10 the:G. . Which is 
e King Pro- 


„ e 5 


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by! =» 70. the Kong. 

claimed . 0 72 1 75 5 XII. 
Attended 4 it the Hague by Commiſſioners 
from. them. XIII. 5 Thomas Clarges 
returus from the Ki ing. XIV, XV. Gene; 
.ral Mo untague's Arri Goa at. the Hag 
with the whole F. leer. 


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Speaker of the Lord's K Houſe, intreating his 
1 1 to acquaint the Earl of Mancheſ'r 


S To 


for | 
iris, chat Shur 45 Tettets from the King 


ol eng the Houſe inet ag ny 


, rhe 


Bur wü the Com. 
ati EL — te . 
r Lotds 


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to deliver to the 


ch he was comma 


therewith. 


rent f 'TbisRelation — 
Na Fay of 0 ang unit 
Her 


| fa.of Cüm. 


vernment in a engl, 1b be, f 
. And, after his 


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ſent 00 Meſſenger, [ 314 | © FN 15 


65 511 eo FP Þ5coebbtth Had ay 1551418 


enn 4 1. Moi. 


N 


” 


long diſpoſſelsa; 'not 9 4 . his Kingde |; 
but Revenues, the Houſ by f Com 1 pass d | | 
a Vote for the preſenting ö hi £ 1 


Duke of a 4 47 8 aud hoe thouſand ene 6 
prefers Diſarch) were 10 be ig i 


— —— . ——— 
\ * 


I 3 — — 


Leer to: | buy! | Hen a. new which he Was 
ro wear las a Memorial of the Nees 
fed 22 1 louſe en GE \nd>a 


2 Ebb # pews . N 


us 407 * EN 17 6 0 ade Kn 50.4 £36 416100 


V. A Baring mention d che Gratieude 


4 ' 
e 


vi. Tox 


DID: Re 


* bw" 94 


- 
ORG RAS 3 22> - 
Toca — 2 mA : — * 1 rt — h 
| þ 4 
OE Sane: 2-21 - 
— 
9 1 5 
— 
* I 


. . .. 8 3 — 1 a. ” 
7 E PEE . 2s 
— hy 4 — + bo ad G's . 4 * # 


e Newhart >oP fach. 


3 on aA eee 
=_y * On 


Vetrerd ; And that he 
poclite his Ruf into Ea 


ä Mayor and Citizens, that the — thouſand 


OL G44. 


2 Henn chin wits I bir ir - 


Nu eee q 
dean tht 


foycralHouftb):'4 bud amend upon 
Majeſty ide theif! Anfvet T0 his — 


wy 3 them: and that General — 
wette 8 in Readmeds to 10 


with 


Geer i Bagel wd che —.— 


wer Confäderd, Aug in Ae — 


into England could Dor BS detentiy ſet in 


Order tilt the Money were remitted'thither; 
The General ſb far prevail u Wirk the Lord 


dc voted: dy the Houſe of Commons fot 

ve Ms deity wn hbfdy raiſed, | 
aden wn de pen Gren- 
Maid Pounds in Gold he 


terwards 


. e ——_— 3 


\ g 5 


GeExzAAL Movx. 333 
awards paid at Amſterdam upon Sight. With 
Sir 74 ar over 40! his Majeſty 
the Lond 


impriſonmett: in id. Calles,aphere, he 
had been conſin d W wi ſince the Battle a 


I Web b E al | nat if 
* See him to ug 


— 


be would borchuirb anz dhe 
Dutch Coaſts. Ccording 


John 
with the Aary Frigat (chen called Sts — of 
er) and leſtia good Convey in, che Dome to | 
; oyex; the: Ce 1101 2 | 


bring l 1 
reſt o the Fleet to ry | | 
Shore h b. 50 1 
vn Tas neut Day Sir obs: Greeavih = 
landed: at Jnfbings: and then 2 | 4 
King at Breda; Where he acquainted him — 1 
with the welcome E amor eb Hübi ; 
5 fevers Tubby: and chat all things did 1 
concur in Bug lub to haſten his Re taurati, l 
on; te which dhe: bad brought aver fifty. ay 


thouſand 


* - 


n 


A 


— 


„ 


— 


2 


hs > —_—_ * —— n = 
AY 99 9 We; 8 * — — — --> des a , . a = aug 8 8 , 
* * D A a a — — 


Yeu 2-4 — * 254 — — 2 — - 
Cs OY TIO "AY 7 
5 0 x — * 
i 7 — 9, js 


me L 
3 


——_— 


Ld. Ss oe EE. ld 
* * o 
* fe . I 


Naar * _ 


Ws, WON 994 er — 
es 


* - 1 

on 

* F 
=: . 

285 
2 F 

3 

EI 4 

9 
Wer 4 : 
N= 
N 
n 
75 
725 
* 

7 
13 7 

. 
$2.5 1 
* 23 
27 
1 

j 
"> 


14 


* 
- * 5 - 
CORY dre 


J 
$ FS 1 8 I * q bs = . 
N * 
<q 8 
"we ; "es 


with whom: 5 were 6 ho O\ 


5 fo 
$4 


FE? 


' receiy iv, 


to his Majeſty. 2 e of which — 
50 Declaration 
the aac, diſparch'd away 0 all the 

iſs and Regiments; where 
whey. were entertait'd with the like Readineſs 
and Submiſfion.' The General had, by bis 


former Methods, ſo effectualſy regulated bis 
port made of a- 


-Army, that thete' was no Re 
ny one Officer thar refus d to fgn the Ad. 


"ed. 


* wor p 8 n g N 4 6 
* % £2 37 * 1 5 7 3 K «4 wil {0 15 * „ 7.3 2s 
97 2 7 5 8. © $4 7 
Wy TA N 1 $3 4 1¹ 


X. Tar 8 | Kddrefs front: th fiery, toge 


A 3. 


- ther with the General's s Letter Was ſent to 


| "ow Majeſty by Comm "Clarges:./ and 
gave a further Aſſurance of the Army's C Obe. 
dience and Submiſſion. Tits Majeſty had be. 


ww erer d an Acount of Hit Genrlemar 
an 


ore AY : 
ed his Majeſty” 8 Lerter and Declaration to the | 
rs O. near him; 


together with the Copies of 


he Fit Pele ole i hs { 
| Title cr or Mark I} 


pes. ö 


+& bod a 3.4 Hifi, 
Fo! 8 a 
| er # 5111 

. an "31 


geeſſotz. {oth 


1 ! t bs of "this WL = 
it rad; as 2 v4 of the King's a 


Light of ; the Morn | 4 
72 #3 


k \ x 
1411. 4 {+7 "I — 
4 4 | 90 1 bete %. # % 204 25.08 It; 4 1% D tf 41 


. dhe ; 1 | Mounts Ins eb an 


% 
CE 0 
"PE. 7 as oy. - 4 * 0 7 a 8 Tf * * 
» 3 34 4 * W.4 Ay * N 


— 


3 * 
TT 7 n 


. no 
A 


. o 
FY 
— = — 
ky oe , 


— r nm 
* * 


—— 


— ; . * 
ä — ñ ũ — — „. aeee et fee ONE: 


* 8 


— —— — 


= | is ; Majeſty. at. Ck ee 8 ws had : 
BY - \ xemoy'd; mo pu in order to the receiv. 


I | ing them. the And the Engliſb Fleet was 
i. already avid near him in the Bay of chert. 


7 *' | ae where they lay at Anchor, in Readineſz 
wt | to receive his Comme nds. Or the 16" of 
A May the Com iſlioners attended his Majeſty 
at the Hague ; and; according to their Inſtru- 
ctions, they acquainted him: That, befor 
tzheis ſettiig forth; the Parliameut had al 
ready proclaimed. him in his City of London, 
which was already done in all the reſt of his 
 Dominions. That, for >the: Sutceſs. of bi 
Arrival 'and Future Happineſs, they had or. 
der'd the Prayers," for the King's moſt Ex. 
cCellent Majeſty, to he reſtored in the public 
1 Office of the Church; and had prepared the 
: ay for his Arrival, by eretting the Ryu 
2 Arms in the Place of thoſe fer -— the late 

 nſurping. Common-wealth: ;They were al 


further: to ſupplicate: his N. 4900 M Min wo 
bis Return; and thut the Houſts might it 


ceive timely Notice in nu my manner bel 2044 
| pheaſe 1 70 be received. a e of en 4 


lect 
{0 


7 „ 1 v e Sigh Us * 0 cone 

arrived at the Hague, "his: Majeſty, in th 

Kras e d Sir 7 nat Clarges ** 
wy 


935 


y 


his inrending te Hud at Dover.” TON OV 
N 2 * 5 un 65 I's 1 t/ OF 1 N * * Y 4% TAY 8 ; ö ; A * N 


XIV. By we Adtivat of 1 


* . 


Jorg een a 


4 * 2 4 r 1 1 . 


GE; this Feſtivity | 
mii er could not conceal | 
veal  Meontague had left am ly: a Con. 

TS, | | had not 1 ut Fleet 
0 Mrend them ©; Voyage. But, to pa- 
_ this . an ancodated Order was 


#, 


to have the Splendour of a 
de the Monarch of 
Rays of Royal 


for England. to the eneral, with News of 


/ 


\ 


Fi * 1 


* 


2.6 


5 © 
_— — — —ͤ —ů— — —— N —— „« „ U, 323 —— ——ͤ—ͤ— — — 


2 


CR 


2 ** 


IL 7 2 Kin ing N at Derag and'; is receiv. 
i by the General II. Ar Canterbury the 
General it made Knight of the Garter Il. 
The King is received by the Ar 

27 a Black-Heath. "IV. Ei, Enrrance in 
2 V. The Aber of i. 


; fed at Whitc-Hall by 
Ls both Hier VII. The Places and Hi 
| nau conferred ao s General. VII. 
| vil. IN. The General 
made @ | nie pi of Mo: Treaſury, 
- and em Lord Neger X. He 
tit created Duke of eee and has 
ſeven thouſand. Pounds per Annum fel. 
tled upon him and his Heirs: His great 
Temper and Humility ſbeum in the upper Wl 
"Houſe: He promater the Act of Obliviam. 
XI. His IMaderatiun in general. XIII. 4 
acid tnflance. of it, in hi Conſent it 
ahanding' the Army. XIII. As it 


ee eee Di/ — in the Res 


Py e erer e to 60 dighandeh 
RAMSEY of 8 Scotla all The haffy 
"Beets of his” Taps! Adminifratio tent 


* His publict wrt and Service: 4 
i 


: | | Gus NERA'L. Maur. 347 
1 A 4 Sir Edward Aan 0 


* 72 N ue FF PA, 
By 4 LS „ 1. * ASS v4 NI 1a 
— 4 ; ” 4 


1 
* * * - * 0 .* & N 8 
Fre Ao A ar rae es — 


4 2 ; 45 - . 4 Ly ; 
ww 5 + 4 7 7 5 f 135 YI 8 
* * 0 , * 4 4 


3 


— — — » 


= — King's chgs tin in Fo 
Board his Fleet, May a3. Where he fre took 


* 
3 — 
- , — 8 


Doſſoſlam: Ld his Dominion at Le. and chen | 
ready — ceive hw on the: Share: - a = 
| and after the Sight of his Majeſty, 
many there preſent had a particular Curioſity 
to obſerve their Interview; which was per- 
form d by the King with extraordinary Kind- 
neſs and Affection; and, on the Gene 
1 with that Duty and proſtration, as if 111 
come this Day rather to ask nnn 
don, than to receive his Thanks. 


= Sedan * ee 1 Majeſty | 16 

wo.Canterbuny, where he receiv'd the firſt ho- 11 
nourable Mark of his Favour, being there 440 
made Kr 10Ht of the Garter, which was the L 1 : 
Foundation of thoſe further Dignities which | 
were to be conferred upon 


1 
1 51 * "IE W 
eee A N K „ * 


him. And the 
moſt illuſtrious Dukes of 7ork and Ghoncefter 101 
put upon him, with their own g the En- 11 
mee his Order, | e „ 


% | - p 7 5 i f l 


5 III. IN 


„ 


7 Y 
4 


PT 
a 


EET EE SY — 
. 


— 
* Ur . 5 toe PEA A ak 1 
* . - P A. 9 * * 1 8 
X - > 8 : p ? r e 
A» E . 2 Pn bv tw — 


2 


c 
* 
. K 


* — ee — 
* J * " Y >» 3 N A 
WO EI CI . Altec tim rei; * * = . So 


& * 
"INE" AE At. n 
0 0 


WU * 


" * © „ . RR TEST 
BIR bs es 2 00 et o'r ee BU 2 


e 


3 n. L 772 ſo 


A 74 . 8 95 
BY) * an py B * 14 ***. * 


in. be wy the be Way of his King's 1 Propy ; 
towards London, the General had mach k 2 


dom of Diſcourſe with his Majeſty, and was 


admitted to all his private Hours. At BJack- 
Heath he led his Majeſty to view that Part 
of che Army, Which was then drawn up to 
offer their Addreſs and Service to him. An 
Army of ſuch clear Courage and exact Diſci. 
pline, that, ins. united into one Body un- 
der ſuch a General, it would have ſhaken any 
Crown in Chriſtendom, not excepting his 
who! i iS now thoughr/ſo pe 1 to bi 


oO urges 0. of.» 12> 


| 1 2 * 2 15% hut l 4 1 
May? 9 IV. ne 38 his Majeſty: — bi 
triumphal Entrance into Landon on the An- 
niverſary of his Nativity; on which Day, 
thirty Years before, he was born in this his 
native City of #e/tminſter: In this glorious 
and magnificent Proceſſion, the General rode 
next before his Majeſty: The reſt of its State 
and Order is ſo ſufficiently known and de 
Acrib'd; that we will not ti our ner with 
the e italy: 
nn a> 4, ION 2 cds". NY 400 
v. 15 the Splendor. and. A eee of 


this wad s Tr Ss his nt exceeded all 
his 


* pale be 18. For neither tl the Recep- 


tion rob Nic hard the 1* from the Holy Lon 0 


and his Captivity in Germany; nor of Henry 
the: V's fro m the Conqueſt of FHrauce, nor of 


Henry the VII to his Cotonation .from: the 


Battel of Boſworth, had any thing compa- 
| ificences In which 


able with this Day's? { 
his Majeſty: alſo: greatly mee ns Gratlde 


King James, 


to worde Crown os eee wich his own. 


TAE * er WSETS 1 8 b 9 nl 
Ann 41 +4 Ks 1 1 * 3 1. . 4.9 b 


Ar TER thirGloaies ind Feſtivities of 


in VI 


this Day, che General having ſeen. his Majes 


ſty ſafely lodged in his Palace at I hite· Hall 
and congratulated there by both his Houſes 


of Parliament, retir d to his Apartment at the 


Gkpit, wWhither he was.now: xemoy'd,” to 
be nearer the King's Preſence and Counſtls. 
And when his Friends and Attendants began 
to renew their Thanks and Acclamations to 
him for his great Service antl Faithfulneſs, in 


producing the Effects of this Day; he was 


ſo far from being exalted with any Opinion 
of his own Merit, that he detlin d them all: 


Telling them, he bad all along been beſet 


| N 3 many Difficulties and Feulouſies up- 
um, aFall T, banks and chnowleagments 


GENERAL Monk. 343 


: * ACS — . r 3 5 2 2 0 
3 . . 4 22-2; Att * 
$44 1 0 


Nr 


— mT . * — ** = * 
bed: - he 5 * e * 
* , OAT ag 03 we - 


x 9 * 2 B EN N 
— ; : 29 6 r * 3 Mags 
Le ee EE AKA P . 


r 
« * 44 A ada: 


3 — 


2 . 8 
% 2 ” — 
rim he a". vob. 5h. a 


7 OE OFT. mY 
1 


„ „ 2 Wb 
* — 
4 * 
» : 


bear n eld. \ * N Cons e 5 3 


in baden: LY: e his Majeſty" 8 Re. 4 


lantation, he ſettled his Privy onncil, cho 
* out of the Ching neue zelor e 


— bashad a conſiderable Station in in 
r 1 Aken ws Pt the cor: 


11 GEE. SES.1 EAN BOLT r 


$ 
BY 


4 5 y 
* Sa WB 2 3 


<a ; mention' here. his Ma- 


che General in this great A 
Greenvii; e upon his Majeſty's. 
was s made f t Gentleman of the Bed · chamben 
Gro of che Stole, and afterwards, 2 
ty of the Coronation, was 
— Fart of. 


Bath, Viſcount Greenvil of 
2. , Lau, 


GAA 8 345 
30 Baron Greenvid. of Biddiford 


* 14 * 
and Kell bampta Q 
| Mr. Nicholas: Aw. — 8 made 
| en — Mets wad. ak ij wa N of 


th = nothing aue Arz 0 — the 
nagement af his 
neral was choſen one of the Commiſſion» 
ers for the Treaſury; but that Oſſice was 
beme cine afterinembied in the Hands of u 


of Southampten after whoſe Death, both 
the King and People were ſo perfectly ſatiſ- 
fied with the General's Care and Faithſulneſs 
in that Truſt, that he was called to it again, 
aud in which he continud to the Day of his 
Death. To this Employment he brought ve- 

ry congenial Virtues, both by. his unqueſtio- 
— 3 and natural Frugality; fo that 
he was a 
, thar in ſome 


ons OWN! 


8 » hae A t $1:16 
X. Nin: did ade. Cattens.ofi his Majeſty's 


Favour and Gratitude to the General ſtop here, 
his 


Majeſty's Exchequer, the 


the late juſt and upright Earl 


7 
ED. ¶ P „ — —ZA—A=-= 


ene eee . 


25 within a little more chan a Month after 


—— 
* K 


K 2 % eee — 


* 


2 Get — 


4»— 9 22 ann. RIM e 


uw 
* ——ñx̃ ͤ —— ot le —— a. hag „3 
\ 1 
” . 


* 
* VLA 
1 Y J 
. * 1 
$ * . . - * 
0 7 * 
4 
89 * 


o cho D Do Of 


of Atmel, "Fart ot 45 16 W 8 
A be heibetter te Support of this bigh 80 
—— the Penſions recited in the Le 1 
ders Parents, his — | ſertled upon h him 


desde Bircher gen — — — | 
eſtimor oſitheirigreat and —. Eſti· 
wind Reſpect towards ſo great and il- 
ious a Perſon, moſt of them attended him 
| or of the: Lord's ran Js er 


ik —— inſel] — to ſack Coun: 
ſels 4 as a moſt promote ne . 19 er 


100 Sond Pardon tokich w was rg de De- 
bate, and had taken up ſo much Time in both 
8 * did eee move his _ to 

| | 3 Ver 8 


* 
GEWA Mei. 347 
very: conſiderable and effectual tos oven 
Sqariy..anbchs de. of his People. vie 
5 9470 257013601 A © "9711 BEI! * ee AW 
XI. THEY who: 02 had ae gbd bes- 
tune And billes by great Services, to ob- 
ge Kings and States, may be eaſily thought 
not to want Spirit or Inclinations enough to 
ied: poten own Merits.” And there- 
hi 45. M not the: V irtues and Cauti- 
e b . Value am hünſelg | 
a5 to have govern'd the pnblick: Qounſels, to 
have: over · ruld the Opinions on Methods 
others, Or have render d himſelf che Head of 
an Intereſt; or, with Mut iamu n (uhoſe Ser- 
vices to Veſpaſian had rather ſome Reſem- 
blance with the Duke's, rhan an Equality) 
haut made rere a Comp mon with his 


ad therec S ts had poſſeſsd his Majeſty's | 
Favour." rom his great Prudence, ſo he us di it 
with equal Humility. And he that had ma 
uma aded Armies, which: why © | 
prefuming; he that for ſeveral-: — an ; 
abſolure Prince, had  govern'di cut luud, knew 
now as well how to obey, and be a dutiful 
dubject i in England. Nor was he leſs careful 


; 75 
; 3 | 5 
5 A + 
4 * * 3 * 2 5 4 : 
IN n n of ' 
bt - * 91 


* 


uf his juſt Regards 
all the Nobility nd 1 Miniſters of State, who, 
though they had frequent Emulations among 
ves e — uy —— 


ue of them from ſta 8 Yo he — 
en ye the e Geameſs of his n and the 
covetous the Rena, of them. | 
1 eee ; 2 F 5 1 4 * hs ESA oY "Wi. ; 
* very conldecble Part of 


oy in the Army, and the 
| of chem would greatly leſſen his 
Power 1 yet when the Parlia- 


ment had iy a their Mi no Man di 


& 1 12 : w - ) 
1 | E. , * 5 Aa * 1 3 f F *. W „ N 
* . * n — * ar 4 , $54 46:3 1 p 4 
by 5 £ , 4.11% a * * 
$ : , 
7 * 4 $ 5 < . 
c 
* 2 * . ' : ] 
v4 Y 5 . p * 5 
1 D a 
1 9 
1 


„ 


= ASS... A ̃⅛—ͥer ii %ꝗ ] Ü MEE ³ K 


1 F } 


ne voss. ap © 
1 ou ENDS Les” 


; : 7 0 a \ . 


XII His Majeſty had ha very ju . to ; 
thoſe Forces, in the full Payment of their Ar- 


rears, and very kind alſo in the 1 7 given 


by a very mall Act of Parliament that 
gave them their Freedo Wy, kts xerciſs, their 
Trade in all Cities and Towns cor 

This was a Temper very Aer row th 
in the Army of the late U | 
who were ſo inſolent and reſtiye, as they 
would only march at their own. Pleakire. a 


14 


pick and thuſs their Employment, and} 4 ; 
 oquently\nuriny'd againſt; their e Maſters Hg 
ra winnen of dib ding. 


20 Teh of þ 5 74 


XIV. Tv pleaſed his Majeſty Rich 0 


Time to confale with the Duke about the 
Government and Affairs of Scotland, and the 
RTE SES 1 . 


them over and above out of his NOR Bonn | 
ty. Yet, that Poſterity may fee ch 
the good Diſcipline of an Army K ro | 
the dichanding of them, as well as the kes 

ing chem up; the Duke had.jnured them o 
ſo exact an Obedience, chat, when they, a 

their Continnance would be noneceſſary ro 

the Nation, they laid down their ir Arms y ith- 

out Murmur, and betook themſelyes to orh 


Employments ; to which they Were enabled, 


Tate: 


E 1 4, 
— N bs. po * n 


eee eee We 0 
1 s + L e * 1 


9 — n ge . rn 
6230.0 3 8 rr — 


—— S EE dE NE Enos 
* * e * 
5 og c : 


— 
4 n 


3 » 
+ : 


3570 
Choice of Officers of S in all which fe 
advis d with great Experience and Prudence; 
though many things were afterwards altered 
by the Inſſuence and Importunities;of others. 
E Jas an Inſtance of thoſe. true and eka 
Meaſures, wllich, in the Time of his on 
Command, he had taken, for f ſettl 
peace of that Country; the Effects thereof 
continued many Years aſter he had leſt it: 80 
| char n Rebellion, nor any oonſiderable Di- 
rbance, Was form d any more in dari 


during che Dukes Li * ; e 7 
«| * Ob : 1 | - + 3 | A p 
mY AH 4+ MG, N Ane a MC ava 


* „An How om. Mus had, a greates 
| Sha ein Delights of this happy Change, 
than he who: had the greateſt Share in effack- 
ing it, who could only enjoy the Satis faction 
of it without the Diverſions, being always 
deſet-v with continual Cares of publick Truſt; 
made Sir Edward Nicholas (who bad 
re 3 75 of State to, Two. Kings) ſay, | 
dul: vice which the 
to the Crown 


| Phe "Kin 's. Reftaurati 
fletting' apbn Bie Service before, deſerved all 
the Favor md Bounty which, his Majeſy 
Jac Ow PIs + to eee . hone: 


2 15 Log 
* 


15 N K * 4 R . „ "OF ws $ * 
, 7 
. | cn 
4 —— * 
* 


1 


Gu N "RY Us I 35 $ 


bs nag ip * . | VII. ſtr 14 TERM 


fine ar Tt DIGITS © 1H go97 het RU WEHD carrot 
L General N Monk's Cendaur in g. ryal of 
the Regicides;-wwith' a parrismlan Ali of 
.(Genero/ity to dir Arthur Klukusg. II. A 
Inſurrettion in London: II, Bui im- 
nadiareqy fuppreſſed by the engpal's own 
Regime 1 IV. ct * FOMfARNEd.- 5 
27 16438 ol 4 do nt ome bun 00 
Fl THERT: O we have) ſurveyed the 
: ; 0 Endeay« ours of the Duke of Aller 
mart le aga inſt-the Enemies of the Crown, and 
now we ſhall find him employ d in the Pu- 


general Dando, rt wich; thats Taipei nge 10 | 


thoie particular Perſons who had been con- 
cern d in the Murder of the hate King; 5 his 
lajeſty ac ACCOrc ingly granted his 4-9] 
of) yer and 
| England, directed to ſeveral of the chief Nobi- 
lity and Judges of the Land, for che 3 of 
thoſe Regicides, which was begun. Ofober 
In the, Number of theſe Commiſſior 
the; World one of the greateſt, Iaſtances.of his 
Moderation: For though he knew more of 
bs le and er ol theſe Criminals, 


E 


| niſhment of "th ig 10 For the Parliament hav- 


Terminer, under che great Seal of [ 


* * 


0 r 


bo. "” + * 
i 
1 1 9 
5 127 * 
. 


than . of thoſe vba f cs . and 
| ſome of them had been his greateſt and moſt 


e e Enemies; yet he aggravated no- 


And, by a like getierous Way 
of forg ving ee he had a little befor 


| diſengage he Dake from che Peforman 0 
| 1 0 e : Wb" 


e $0030 3 TED Yang 9 
5 . 

| my Ou might 

char fuch an AR of ge 


Pardon as had 


reſy and Fanaticiſmm are not to be cuted by 
Baiſams, For about rhis Time began fuch an 
on 2s, it is not eaſy to tell, whe- 


ther the Fury or the Folly" of it were the 
_— 4% "wad 9 1 being then 


gone 


— 


them, but left them to a fair 
Tryab and the Methods of their own De. 
fence, when he could have offer'd Matter a. 

ſome of them that would have preſſed 


red Hi -alſo, by own- 
made to him; os, there 
To the n all had more mali. 


— bes 


been lately pafsd, might have oblig d the 
Minds of alf People to à Submiſſion, and Sa. 
tisfaction in the Government; but that He- 


: 

CCI 

TE 
5 


GENERAL MON K. 3 5 1 


gone out of London to Portiſnouth, whither 
de accompany d the Queen Mother aud Du- 
cheſs of Orleans in their Journey towards 
France; a ſmall Company of the Fiſth- Mo- 
nachy Zealots, having arm'd co an in 
linies, e dh hatch d, broks. qut int an a- 
Qual Rebellion in Landon. Theis AS ch | F 
was alſo their Captain, one Hens a Wane- 
Couper, Who had preach d his Dißeiples to 2 
Degree of Madneſs and Extrayaganeies, De- 
yaud the Force of: all che Vine in ji iS. Cell 
"AED ai: CASSEL: 7 wp nts EAA boa 
u. * Jernpeival was ſo tudden a8. di 
greatly ſurprize the City; and tho their N 
der was contemptible, yet Men beliey d they 5 
would not have ventur d: on ſo deſperate. an 
Attempt, but upon C licence of a greater 1 
bay in London royoin/with them. Many ut. 
| of them. had been Soldiers in Crojm es Ar- | 17 
ny, and, being poſſeſs d with the Height of | 
fanatick'Rage,: 4d about them at a rate nat 
uſual, News was any effectual Reſiſtance. made 
wainſt them by the City Arms, or the new- 
nis d Guards; till the Duke of Albemarle - | 
brought his own Regiment of Foot. (not yet KOTA i 
| 


9 
——— 


— < wng-oap/ —— 
— — . — — — 
i 


dsbanded) up among them, who, being old 


vidiers Thar had been long accuſtom' d to this | 
ö 1 — 


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354. Ne LIFE 1 of 


kind of Work, uickly put a Ghetk t to their 

1 d ſpetate Madneſs, having kild and wounded 
everal of ther upon! Se 8 a n 

erl. 2 8 


Safety and 2. . * to des: ol lg 
Grace's own R cat, and ſome other ſmall 
againſt ſuch haſty Attempts. Io 
arhich: the Duke reply d, That his Endba- 
w0ur to "continue any Part of his Arm), 
ub he obnoxious to much Miſe interpreta: 
tion, that be would by 1 meant appear in 
it; but being further importun d, that be 
would not hinder their Endeavours therein, 
he made no Anſwer. But, by theſe Appli- 
cations to his Majeſty and Council, that Re- 


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e lia 70 4 — Life. In, F 
Iv. A War with Holland; the Duke of OY 
Vork aud Prince Rupert command the Fleet. 
V. An — — VI. The Dutch beaten. 
VII. Our Fleet pur ſues them as far as the 
Texel. VIII. The Loft the Dutch /uftain 
ol"; * De Bravery of tbr Duke 'of 
X. The Plague breaks out ju Lon- | 
Had #008 :apbieb;" thi: King goes t OK - | 1 
ford. XI. The Care of the City commits -. . | 
ted to the: Duke of Albemarle: His Ten- i if 
derntſs and Chi paſſion to the Poor. NII. 1 
He it affifted by the Archbiſhop of Canter- 
bury and the Earl of Craven. XIII. An 
 Encampment in Hyde - Park. XIV. The 


5 ä of _—_ ee Te ko 


\ 
o 
O14 — ̃ 7 — - 


"HE . Veer! 1 with his 1661 
Majeſty's Coronation; which was 
erforne'd with greater Ceremony and Mag- 
lificence, than we can meet with in the Inau- 
huation of any of his Royal Predeceſſors. The 
ſteparatory Ceremony began April 22. with 
4 * Majeſty” N — Paſſage W 

Aa 2 1 


I} 


A 35 „% 
City Heat the B of. 1 to his Pa. 
5 155 at White-Halt; attended by his dome- 
- ſlick Servants) the Judges, and Nobility, with 


che chief Officers of State, and paſſing tho 
thoſe four triumphal Arches; which the Citi- 
rens had eres EC to do Honour to the Solem- 
nity of the. Da Day. In this Ceremony the 
Duke of Albemarle, 48 Maſter. of the Hor 
FR. followed his "s. Triumph; leading the 
2 Aras Horſe of State. The next Day his Majeſty 
| was ſolemnly crown'd at Weſtminſter, inthe 
; Abbey Church, wich all the uſual Ceremenic; 
In the Proceſſion from V eftminſter-Hall to 
the Abbey, the Regalia were carried before 


the King by the chief Nobility, and, among } 
the reſt, the Sceptre and Dove was born by ; 
the Duke of Albemarle. In the Time of te 1 
andinting, he was bne of the four that held * 
up the Pall of Cloth of Gold over his Mae. 
ſty's Head, whilſt the Arch-Biſhop of ( 
terbury perform'd the Union. And after |; 

' wards he; and the Duke of Bucbingbam, di, 
— mage for themſelves and the relt of ths 4 
Order of Dukes in gn, " . 
un. a now Fo Majeſty: being perl ; 

1 5 ſettled in the. Government, actually crowns i 
and the Army dibunded; de Dake CE & 


benark 


a ENERAL Moxx. \.357 
Privacy : So that we. fine e . 
Action of biel Kae for ſome; Yeats, ſave-char | 

5 r attended at the Parr Famechs 7 


WBETES> 7 2,30 tw] * OT 99 A FE Fe. 
III. Fu home ig . $a: Ds: 2 
orderly exeepting ſome little Plots and Con- 
trixauces among the ſeditious; which were 


ſtill ſo timely; diſcern d, that they were as ca- 1 
fily, prevented... Nor had bis Nays any 1 
Quarrels abroad, haying renew d Alliances in 
with all his Neighbours, till a War begun 1 
with the Durch. Who ra to give Sa- 1664 
rifatiqn,for;old Injuries, and contriving the 

77 5 of new ones, rais d, ſuch a Multitude 1 

of Complaints againſt them by the Subjects | a 
of this. town, that his Majeſty (having firſt uv 
in vain fought Reparation, by Treaties, and | 


Meſſages). reſolv d at laſt, with the Advice * 
his'Priyy- ouncil, to enter into A War, with 


and unanimous Vote of the Parliament then 
firing, for the .raiſing of Money , proportio- . 
nable to maintain it. So that by the follow- ö 
mg Springij Mal, had made 17 a F * 7 
n 9 


the Statess. Which was ſeconded by 2 brisk ; 


General Mountague (fo nce Earl of Sendici J 


Lv. 22 


* 7 4 , 
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356 
or Hoke: an handed Sip f was furniſn d 


wit tty thouſand Mariners and Sol- 
diefs And his Royal Highneſs the Duke of 
Tok; being alſs'Lord High Admiral of Zyg. 


Had undertook che Condutt of them, accom: 


oye” with the mo y ee pry Ra- 


bein Viee-Adm Fal. But, before his Royal 
Highneſs went on Board rhe Nw he left the 


11675 Aber mea. of. 72 os Fleet ſet 
Sail from the Dont to the Durch Coalts, 


and Came to an Anchor about the Texel; 


e they continued for almoſt a Month, i 
expecting daily the cb ning out of the Dutch 
Hege and Provoking them to a Battle, by 
taking daily ſevetal of their Ships. But, be- 
Ing'weatied with ſo long Delays, and har 
ing in a Month's Time, chanſted much of 
their naval Proviſions, his Royal Highnel 
ght back the Fleet toward their own 


bd 
Shores, from whence they might be again 
. mote ſpeedily e * whilſt he 1 


een Marr. 359 
Anchor in the. Ganga, hear, Hereich, 


| < 
1 d onſi . 
1 hundred Ships, and 3 ng d, 
led by the Admiral Qpden, and four Vice- 
ſeveral, Engliſh Merchant-men coming from | fl 
Hamburgh, w which had UN. ly fallen | | | 4 
in among chem. "Though his Royal, ligh- '3 4 
neſs had pieſctced.. them Battle upon theic 2; 
ox Cools, hone pang willing to receive | a 
d che Fleet inſta y t weigh Anchor” -” 
towards n Bay, where be arriv'd Fane 1. 3%, : | 
| And the ſame Day Intelligence Was brought 1 
him, by ſome Ships kept out for Diſcovery, 
that they kad Sight of the» Enemy's Fleet. 


Wherefore he « comma the Fleet to weigli „ 
. 4 


Si : al the "Sail be 80 Id to zein 5 

» Dutch Fleet; bur they, being to Windward of 
bim, dealin d engaging That Night both 
kleets came to an Anchor at convenient Di- | 
ſanco ef aach other; fo that the next Days 5, 3 
eier three in the Morning, Prince Rupert, 

| Aa BE who 


B 


2 r * * © ED — 
——— — 4 


I, 4. 
e 


1 a 


. . 


1. Fi oh 
deſirous to gain rhe 
leet, kept off at pre. 


Jed K. Gori all cloſe Engagement, and made 


Several, TackF upon” hit: So chat his Royal 
came at lengeh to have his own 
q! vadron in Front of the Enemy's Line; hay. 
Sit La * on head of him, Who 
# Pol Heet, ſeconded by 
eeping ſtill che Wind of 
Pr. of their Fire. 
1 of 1 ein”: ed the Engliſh 
et, The Dale then obſerving Admira 
25 Ship. to come" up into their Line, 
Ibis oWn ts bear t to him, by 
Example, and following: the Motions 
- Adm nals Ship, the Body of the Eng- 
Ht, n e cloſe up to the Enemy, and 
oh a their! on All Hands at near Diſtan- 
But his Royal Highneſs charg'd Admi- 
11 dn ſo warmly, that, after a {mart En; 
- -Eounires,” his Powder. Rom was x fie, a and 


+ 


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"megan ro ſhrink, an 
they ce d tie Los obcbeir Adar 
ö they made their ow-n Misfor 


SN > + + - rune 


4x 


cine this Days che greater, by an haſty and 
inc . as 'E: — — 5 in Whieh they loſt the 5 
| iral, wr yt ak ad 5 
frightful Run, four of 
A * of, gh ogy 


— a in this: 
1 2 Ships 


E vn. this Majeſty's 3 had dae hebe of 
the Dave! the Day towards their own 


ſo that; in gr — early, they were up- 
on them again, deſtroy ing more of their 
Ships, and purfuing 


with their Road; and — leſs Water, they 

got in with the firſt Tide. And afterwards 
his Royal Higbneſs brought off the Eugliſh 
Fleet, triumpbing in their Spoils, and aw 
of the Enemies, to their own Shame. 


VIII. IN this: Fight "OR fell of the Durch, 
| beſides Admiral Opdam, three Vice- Admirals, 
|  Stallingwalf, and Schamp, and 
4 cake, or ten thouſand common Soldiers 
50 Marines, with, the Lofs of about twenty 


eight 


= 


Garkibat More 36 


them to- the Mouth of 
the Texel; where, being better acquainted 


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Sether by ohe Shot un his Royal Highnels's 


Sed a ker: uc vn ert the Begin- 


eight 8 ee, vith! 2 vi 
ts Damage to his Agel), Now 
Having loſt bütydons licxle: ages calld th the 
126d cared ad eite wen and-rh — of 
Ino ae — I erw — — 
or honorar \ Soldiers at this Bartel, fell in it; as 
2 ANI | Bit the Barlof Falmouth, 
| «the Lord -Muckr+y,andMriBoyle, ſecond Son 
to the Patl:of !/Barliig ron, were cut off to- 


in- 


Ship The Bard of {a 1%, who com- 
maaded a 'Frigat; was Hers! flain, with Rear- 


at Zawfon re- 


lig;wh asthoaght- ſo in- 
'gotfiderable;/ thar — rib 
e eke bf it which it deſert d: Nor did 
be male ſo mack 'Haſte to Shore, as be 
mould: 2 a Aa 3 he ye 
| thereof.” 1 on . i ts *y Nur 
c I. fir this argen His Royal High 
nel hall fo far Hog Himſelf; chat neither 
His Majeſty, nor his People, were willing to 
adventure the next Hope of the Common. 


wealth, to ad farther Dangers and _— 
0 


* 


| en Citizens, were dilpers'd for Aer 


HS)» 


Oden Monk. 363 


1 that, the feinaining Part oſ this Summer, 


the Earl of Sandwich, being Vice Admiral of 
England, commanded — Fleet. But this 
late Fight had ſo taken down the ee to- 


had neither Force nor Courige e 
ow er . G elt Arne 


2 Wrrn the k Beginning 06 this War, Sig 
gan alſo a moſt al Peſtilence in London, 


and both were of Dutch Original. For as 


they brought the War upon themſelves, by 


their ſeveral Depredations of Englſb Goods; 


ſo they ſent us the Contagion in ſome of their 


own, convey'd hither out of Holland, where 


lately the Plague had very ſeverely raged. It 


began firſt in London, and frbm thence was 


diſpers d to moſt of the princi 


pal Towns and 


Cities of the Nation, accompany'd: with ſo 


great Mortality, as we have no Account of 
the like Contagion in any Age or Annals of 


England. His Majeſty was therefore en- 


ud to leave his Palace at White-Hall, and 


retire to Oxford, whither afterwards the 
| Houſes of Parliament and the Term were ad- 


journ'd. The Nobility alſo, and Gentry, and 


'. on 


10 > adventure 


—— Ä—-—- —— en Oy — —— 
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1 auen mobel rh Vilagn 
191 ik 41 M 79! 5 20 11. Lad 
r aut fb Ghovitt a hav, 1, 
XI. Bor being tlie capital City of the Ne 
nom, it as nt to he left at random, where 
not only: the Poor, enforc br Necelliy,o 


en courag di through L 1. 


* 

30 
— 

ws 


* ved 


ibert y, 1 
Houſes of the Rich, but che * all 


night take the Opportunity to practiſe no 
Miſchiets; it Pleasd his Majeſty to entruſt 
ahe(Caread/th ifet vof. — ere With the 


Ir: w Leue — athens, yet he very 

eech an, Ahen other Men had 
sd their Eſtates and Fortunes to ſe- 
TT their e he was enntented to ſtay 
and expoſe his own Life to ſecure their 
Properties Nor did he only direct his Care 

ncernments of the Rich, but eſpeci 
en 6h the Poor, by had 


= Woe 


fable Cry, to ach Was s 400 i 
led a Share of his own private Bou nty. 
13 95 10480 18 19 3d. A5 UA is 


XI. T& "cheſs Cires he w, 


12 Pèefſons; Wo — 1 ala 2 
City: His Grace "the Tort - -AtehBiſhop:.'6 
Canterbury, ' who'ſtry'd Y/ogreati Pate —— 
Time at his Palace at 'L:ambeth, where be- 
_ fides his w I vaſt and diffuſive Charity -t 

wards the poor add affücked he S offedtnatly 
holicied the” 6th&*Biſho) 
ſeveral 8 at 4nd almoſt incredible: Sums of 
Money werè raigd for Relief of the Inſected. 


And had "the Faſtiouis given the hundredth Part 


of cheit B zathe Nation muſt have rung 
wih the Vale oc dre ch With 

Dirt :conrfhiugtsrihe Foun; diftibnting 
conſtantly the reatelt Part of his: Revenue 20 
Apply 4 Us Nece eſti 
| ing. 1115 ane 58 7% | * 185 1 F; 7 4 47 * 1 N 


Ibn 1. ; * * | wigs T7) | Wal} A; 19" OI" wt * 2 : ** 
7 » 1 x ne * * 1 4 13 ; Fi 5 up," 7 mw wk 71 05 Ty F 7 > * : 


„nt. TE Guards 4 . bones 


left with the Duke for ſeeuring the Peace of 


The City, were, by his Order, quarter d in 
* Park, where there were Tents and 
1 . 7 Conveniences 


in England; that 


ies of "the ſick cee 


r 


* 2 > 108053 WA Beate 
| CE ORR n 
—_—_* 9 2 e 


366 15 LIPE of 


Conveniences made ready for them; but, not. 
withſtanding all his Care, and their Diſtance 
from the Infection, yet he loſt a great Part of 
them. His oum Reſidence he ſtill continued 
at the Cue l- pit near M hite.- Hall, where, by 
his ———— - Perſons chat had Bu- 
he convers d daily with more 
5 — ;9hw0 1 — any ts the Battels 
that had been foyght by him. 


xv. Bun, befides the Hozard of chis Em: 
ployment, it was attended with ſo many 
Cares and infinite Importunities, as would 
bave troubled a an Hea ks 55 had not been ha. 


ich him boſides his | 
e Lor Chancellor, 
Star ps Wich the Fleet 
| oft 5 In ordering Sup- 
plies for — upon 12 gEafions, out of the 
Stores in the City. His Care was endleſs 
and unceſſant, hoth with the Admiralty, and 
Commiſſioners of the Navy, in inſpecting the 
Management of the Prize-Office: Beſides his 
daily Correſpondencies with the Lord Mayor, 
oo Relief of * Poor, and Security. 0 the 
+ Wo . ity. 


ial Moxk. 
City. His granting Licenc 


367 
for Ships to 


Sea, and appolning: Convoys to arpend — 


deiher tho Di 


hger fahl Depſon,2\kbr 2 rl] 
IV IDEAL, gave kei 4725 
Grace was as baſy and 


banker but hi 


a chan bed 10% 


r e 12 
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8 


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„ 


in Comm aten — the: Dutch. II. 
ke accepts the Charge, againſt the 
er F bis Friends. III. Har the Car: 

f - making ali the Naval Preparations. 
IV. The King ret "RS London. - V. The 
Admirals go on Board. VI. The Dutch 
make an Alliance with the French. VII. 

M bo alſiſi them, and declare War again} 


_ a8 England. VIII. The Preparations on both 
1 5 * Se aer towards Action. IX. The Dutch 
1 Fjͤlleet appears. X. 7. ey. came to an En. 


ws gagement. XI. The Event of it. XII 
=. XIII. Another. — — The Dule 
J reſolves to retreat. XIV. The Manner if 
þ | bas Retreats N FE 


Prince Rupert returus. 

. Aud Joins: the Duke's Hleet; the 
Dutch, pon their Conjunttion retiring 
| e tt bbs XVIII. Reſolued, in 4 Council if 
BY Mar, to give them Battel again. XIX 
ÞB Our Fleets follow them. XX They come 
! | 0 an Engagement upon the Dutch Coal. 
| XXI. The Duke's Courage and Condutt in 
1 this Action. XXII. The Dutch are beaten, 


1 and ger off; the Engliſh returning home. 
. x] N 9 ne yr the 
EEE - | PO wo 


CrxEAAI Moxx. 369 
Dole r Conduct. XXIV. The Opinion of 


the Dutch wpon it. XXV. The Dutch put 


10 Sea again. XXVII. The” Eng gliſh- Fleet 
| war" ee N 


þ . Fa e War wg 


f 1 2 them. . 


21 2 . "% 5 . EE 1185 


"OWARDS — de ven, his 


12 


vith the Dutch, which he had ſo fortunately 
; yet, ſince they were reſolvd not to 


venture his Perſon again to further Hazards, 


it was at laſt determin' d, that his Highneſs 


Prince Rupert, and the Duke of "M/bemarle, 
ſhould, by joint Commiſſion, command at 
Sea, and carry on the War "Fa — hn 


er ; nd) % 
3 Tur Prince? Peng preſerit- upon the 
Place, accepted the Chafge; and his Majeſty 


pointed, the Duke ſhould haſten down to 
reſently did by Poſt, and 


Oxford; which he 
cheerfully ſubmitted to the Commands of his 
Sovereign; though there wanted not thoſe a- 
bout him, who diſſuaded him from this Em- 


18 ; alledging, „that his Merits were 


Bb great 


Majeſty advis'd with his Pri v Coun- 
al at Oxford, about the Conduct of the Fleet 


next Spring. And though his Royal High- 
neſs was very importunate to finiſh the War 


Pour abe e alre ee 3 
tion higber than to need further Advance; 


that his Fortune had already foyl enough, 
aud that he had now no greater Concern than 
to preſerve himſelf where he was; that the ill 
Succeſs of this War might perhaps be ſuff- 
eient to leſſen him ij but the Proſperouſneſi 
of it would add little to his Fame, and much 
to Envy. [Though chere wanted not ſome 
Rensen in theſe Suggeſtions, yet the Duke 
1d 10 politick Contrivance in the Inſtance 

Obegi 3% A, having ſtaid three 
Days at c Oxford, adviſing privately with the 
| | reparaty INS for the War, and 
dv his Majeſty's Thanks for his faithful 
of the publick Safety, and Security of 
the * = Mn 4s _— ER RET at 


III. AND now, being made Co-admiral at 
Sea, he had mother Province added to the 
reſt of his Dares, whereby he was oblig'd to 
give Orders | r the making ready ſuch Ships 
: finiſhed; and the Repair of 

others, chat had been difabled in this Vers 
_ beſides all other ER 2 e for 


0 8 1 IV. Thouci 


' GengxaL Mov. 371 


. Tnoucn the Plague did grea [ | 
= increaſę in other Femorer Cities: and. Pla- 4 | 
j 


ces of the Kingdom, yet, towards the End of 
the Veat, it manifeſſly abated in London; *© | | 
and the City: became ſo clear d from farther - al 
lofedtion, that about the firſt of February, = 
_ his Majeſty. haſten d his Return from Oxford res. 5 1 
io his Court at M hit RHlali. where he might 14 
more commodiouſſy inſpect his Affairs, and 
| adviſe for the further Preparations of his 11. 
fleet. The late Mortality, as it bad fivept 
away great Multitudes in the $ybucbs of 
City, ſo it had defizoy'd abund⸗ 
dea men in thoſe Pariſhes adjoining. to the * Io 
Riyer, and had done the like in other mari- 3 
time Towns of England. Inſomuch that there 4 
was ſome Difficulty in procuring enough of — 7 
thoſe Rout and valiant People to man the 
Fleet. Bur the Duke of Albemarle, having 
lormerly commanded at Sca, had ſo much 
— and Influence among the Se- TH 
men, that, whilſt there was any of them left | 
in England, he was got likely to want their 
he united Iateteſt and Influence of the Prince, 
notwichſtanding the Difadvantages of the late 
Plague, all things were brought into fo good 
ladet a ther both the Men and-Ships CEE 
| A would 


1666 v. eee April > 13. — St. 


"would quickly. be: fit . >" Kail, artadin bor 
their: Kaen 0 come on —_ 


2 George's Day, his Highneſs Prince Neupert, 
and the Duke of 3 took Leave of 
his Majeſty and the Court; and, at M hite. 
Hall Stairs in one of the King's n went 
down the River t to che e. on 


v1 No oR were N Dutch all this while 
dell ſedulougsgin- preparing their own Nayy. 
The laſt Year's War had ſo much weaken'd 
their Fleet, but more the Courage of their 
People, that they found themſel ves not able 
to continue it further without the Arms of 
their Neighbours. -, To that End they had 
contracted a new Alliance with France, from 
whence they were to haye the Aſſiſtance of 
the French Fleet, led by the Duke de Bear 
el bag go! 


VII. Hrs Majeſty of Great Britain was 


0 
already ſo much ſuperior to all his Neigi- WW |: 
bours at Sea, that the French King was great. WW 1 
ly afraid he ſhould grow more potent there, WW ; 
by his further Succeſs againſt the Dutch. WM | 


And _ he hated nothing more than that 
P copts 


1 


GENIAL Mon. | 373 
people and their Government, yet he lov'd 


his own Intereſt better than to depart from it, | | ] 
by denying them Aſſiſtance. He had alreadx 


deſign d the favaſion. of their Country al 1 
Land, and therefore was not a little concern- | f 
ed, that his Majeſty ſhonld prevent him in 
the Conqdeſt, by ſubduing them firſt at Sea. 
And other ſecret Reaſons led him, in Conjun- 1 
ion with the Durch, to declare War againſt | | 
England; which was accordingly denounced | | 
back wen him into 1 ane. 1 


PRE WI I — ira ne ——ͤ— ae oO. 
p FRONT mn __ — 
— 


vil. Een * ny and che Duke of [| | 
Albemarle had, by this Time, brought the 
the Fleet to ſuch Readineſs, as they were 
come to an Anchor in the Downs, reſolv- 
ing from thence to ſet ſail for the Durch 
Coaſts, and find out the Enemy. But, in the 
interim, his Majeſty had receiv'd Intelligence 134 
from France, that the Duke de Beaufort hal |} 
made equal Diſpatch in getting ready the: 
French Fleet, and was coming out to join i 
with the Dutch. Upon which Information 
from thence; his Majeſty, with the Advice of 3 
the Privy- Council, diſpatch'd away Orders 
to his Fleet, That Prince Rupert ſhould take 
twenty of the beſt and nimbleſt Frigats, and, wy 
directing his Way towards the Coaſts of e 
| B 


b-3 - France, 


IM 4 
* — Fan E 
I 


2. I es —'—ê— —— — ——ũ— e — 


by his Hip! 
oh of the Fleet, fill in the —_ * 


e t 
June i the Downs; and the next Morning early, 


which gave Y 
eight of the ſame Morning, from the Admi- 


Admiral Harman, and oth 


ne LIE of 


374 


5 France, ſhould attend the Motions of he 0 


Freueh Admiral, and engage bim before he 
coul jon his Fleet with the Dutch. Theſe 
Inſtructions were preferitly put in Execution 
hneſs, leaving the Duke, with 22 1 


1x Tur laſt of i yy / the Dake ſor fail from 


the Byiſlol, plying about a League from the 


reſt of the Fleet, diſcover'd ſevetal Sail; and 


therefore fir d three Guns one after another, 
Varning to the Fleet. About 


ral's Top- maſt-head, they diſtover'd about 
eleven of twelve Sail; and at the ſame time 


dther Ships diſcover'd about twenty or thirty 
Sail more towards Dunkirk and Offend, and 


preſently after more of them were deſcry'd; 


ſd that it was ont of hand concluded to be 


the Dureh Fleet. Therefore his Grace pre. 
ſently commanded the Flag-· Officers to meet 
in a Council of War, where were preſent Sir 


Robert Holmes, Sir Foſeph Jordan, Sir Chri- 


flopher Mings, Sir George Afcongh, Rear 
8, where it was 
debated, I herber they pon, adventure t0 


engage the Durch in th Abſence of fo conſe 
Aaerable 


GENERAL Monk. 375 
| derable a Bars of their Fleet, then gane a 
with the Nrinte. Hut, in ri gard ſeueral 
good Ships, heſiges the Raya — then 
at Anchor in the Gun: fleet (neither fully 
nan d, nor ready) would, upon their Re. 
. treats le in Danger of a, Surprizal- by the: 
the Enem ; and That ſuch a Conr/e might 
have ſome Impreſſion. an the q pirir 1 Ml 
Courage of the. $2 n, % had Hor: been ö f 
aceuſter? d to decline Fehting with the Dutah:; "= 
it was at laſt unanimouſly reſolved to abide 1 
them, and the Fleet: ſhould" preſently be put 4 
in Readineſs to fall into 4 Line. This Ad- 
vice was agrecable ta the Opinion and Senti- 
ments of the Duke, WHO did very much un- 
dervalue the Power and Forge of the Darth 
Fleet, expecting ſuch eaſy Conqueſts as he 
had obtain d thirteen Vears before. But che 
Datch of late had built much greater. and 
ſtronger Ships, and, by oſten Tryals, had | 
| learnt from On" the: War 6-fs of 4/114 
eng better. 201 61 ih 


un: Toon Dutch — carey 


3 


ei about ſeventy ſix Sail, and ten Fire-ſhigs, 
commanded by the Admiral de Ruyter, who 
ſucceeded after the Death of Opdam. With 
the Duke there was not above filty Frigats, 
9 Bb 4. 0 ” whereof 


A OR at, Neg. 
$45-%6 Loy Vr 4 


—— — e 1 
EY 4 ö 2 * 
N - _— — * — wien 


Aland Squadron, riding | 
my's Fleet, and -prefent 


Royal Catherine, which ſo diſabled him, 1 


Re ads Py 4 
* 4 
6 3 #; 
Ws 
2 * 1 "of. 
* 


— eighteen were ee Dutch Bot. 
toms, which had been taken from the Enemy 


In this and the former War. About one of 


the Clock, about Mid- Sea, towards the Coaſt 


of Dun lirt, the Fight was begun by Rear. 
Admiral Harman, of the White Squadron, 


who led the Van, and bore in upon the Zh. 
gead-moſt of the Ene- 
ently a _ Parr of the 
Ships on both Sides were But the 


Wind blowing high, the Goes of the Dutch 


Fleet fell chiefly -upon the. Sails and Rigging 


of the Engliſb. The Duke was fo intent up- 
on this Change, that | he engaged far among 


them, till he had. moſt of his Tackling taken 


-clear off by the Chain Shot, and his Standard 
ſtruck 5 ſo that he was forc'd to tack 


and go off to an Anchor, being reliev'd by 


the Royal Oak. And, having ſpeedily rigg d 


again with Jury Maſts, and brought new Sails 


to the Yards, = ſtood in again, and fell into 


the Body of the Dutch Fleet, where he en- 
gaged de Ruyter; and, about this Time, four 
of the Dutch great Ships were ſunk and 
burnt; but many of the Sea - men ſav d, being 
taken up by the Exgliſb Boats and Tenders; 
and Trump receiv'd a full Broad - ſide from the 


- 


he was food to get off, as alſo were ſeveral 


other capital Ships that drew into Harbour. 5 


Among the reſt, Yan Trump, with his Ship 


of eighty. two Guns; Van Ghent, with his 


Ship of ſeventy ; and Neſſe, with a Ship of 
eighty Guns (beſides ſome: others) Lab into 
tho: Goree, * torn and mays d. 


MI. Now was it/ any ahi sd was 6 


veral of the Engliſh Ships, which, by that 


Day's Work, were fo diſabled in their Shrouds, 
Maſts, and Tackling, that they were forc'd 
to retire, and make their Way to the next 
Harbour. The Henry had three Fire- ſhips 


upon her; yet had the good Fortune to clear 


them all with ſome Loſs, but ſo torn and 
ſhatter'd, as ſhe was ſent off to Harbour. In 


this Day's Engagement there appear'd no 


conſiderable Damage to any of the Ships 


themſelves. All the Tempeſt fell above Deck 
among the Shrouds and Maſts; and, for the 


Length and Fierceneſs of the Encounter, 
there were very few Men kill'd or wounded. 
His Grace receiv'd that Day a ſmall Bruiſe in 
his Hand by a Splinter, and, among thoſe 


unlucky: and thick Vollies that brought 
down his Tackling, one of them ſhot away 


his ENG but leaving _ Skin untouch'd; 


as - 


and, 


Qua Mot. 377 


f 


& 


i NO NT INNER . 
nN. *. x48 ne, Prot ** 


—— 1 3 Nen 


PPP 


#33 of Ships; was yet the Aggreſſor, and moſt 


| nd by nine or ten of the: Clock at Nike, 
both Sites were well enough content to give 


200 over, — Gul n. cheir Sails and Rig 
$2. ag . 4 e Sit Gr 
June: 0 XU. aw next: 3 Mean fx, x the 


Fight begun again, and the Duke, though fo 
much inferior to the Enemy, i in the Number 


Part of the Day had the Advantage of the 
Durch Fleet; till towards two in the Aſter- 
noon; about which Time the Enemy, which 
was ſo much ſuperior in Number before, was 
rectuited by the Acceſſion of ſixteen freſh 
Ships, by which they were enabled to pres 
very. hang; upon the Engliſh Fleet, who yet 
kept their Ground, and fought it out till E 
vening, though extremely ſhatrer'd in their 
Maſts, Sails, and Rigging, and many Men 
kill'd. The Durch loſt three good Ships in 
this Day 8 Engagement; and the Duke four, 
the Swift-/are,; the Eagle, the Loyal George, 
and the Catharine; which two laſt were no 
Part of the Royal Navy, but Merchant - men 
which had — hir d into the Service. Yet 
though the Ships were deſtroy'd, the Men 
were generally ſav d. This Night the Lord 


A and Sir Thomas at with n. 
other 


"ry 


GENIAL Mok. * 


ther beiter of 1 came from © | 
al, hat abe Pine wegen n be 


wc" 155 1 SA VT £22: a Ot. BH 
5 x * 1 *» o 


xi Bur is — had & fas at 
abled ſeveral of his Majeſty's Ships in their 
Malts and Rigging; and their odds of Num 
ber was fo extremely diſproportionable, that "0 
it was reſolv'd this Night by the Council f 
War, (having with unequal Force: ſo adyait- LS 
ugiouſſy aſſerted the Honour of his Majeſty, 

and their own Galſantry) to make 4 fair and 

_ Ani 

XIV. To tha End 508 next i Hs Jae 

Grace order d all the Men out of two or three 

ſug Ships, which were unſerviceable, and 
| 5 be fired; rather than put 

them to the Hazard of falling into the Eee. 
my's Hand in his Retreat. And now he had 
not full forty good Ships with him to make 
good his Retreat againſt about ninery of the 
Bnemy's. But, commanding all his, weak 
and diſabled Frigars to go off before him, 
and placing about ſixteen or twenty of the 
foundeſt and moſt in Heart to the Bnemy's 
; man he "I a regular and leiſurely Retreat, 
which 


— * 


N * N . K N 
N 
i 


| which was ee with Wy as 3 
alda and Courage, that the Duteb, though poſſeſ: 
FRY {ed with ſo:many great Advantages upon him, 
760 had no great Stomach to the Purſuit, con- 
deeeting themſelves to follow a-loof off, and 
ds fire their Guns at fuch Diſtance, as gave 
| 5 no Prejudice to the Eugliſh Fleet: Till about 
HEY four in the Afternoon, the Wind encreaſing, 
Les they came cloſer up to the Duke in two Bo. 
TE 7 and ſpent ſome Broad Ades upon his 
| Ship; bur were ſo warmly ply'd from the 
Engliſh Fleet with their Stern Pieces, as 

made chem contented to le Farther off. 


XV. Tur ſame Freſh Gale which at this 

out Yi ime had brought up the Dutch Fleet, 
brought alſo the Prince with his Squadron in 
View of the Dake's Ships, which now ap- 
pear'd in the moſt ſeaſonable Minute, having 
made all the Sail they could to come to his 
Relief. Nor was the Duke leſs willing to join 
. the Prince and his Squadron. But, in making 
their Way towards him, ſeveral of the princi- 
3F X pal Ships, and, among the reſt, the Duke in 
. the Royal: Charles came a- ground on the 
+ Gapper or the Galloper Sands, but had all of 
| them the good Fortune to get off again; on- 
8 * che Royal Prince, a great and brave Fri 
= 7 : 1 Bas 


wa wt > bath 
I 
1 4 
: 
1 
' 


8088 Bb. mr VE ww Sa 2 


GIN EAAI Moi. 381 


gat wa ſo deeply rand d, that it Was not 
poſſible to bring her off, but became a Prey 


to the Enemy, where Sir George Aiſtongh 
that commanded. in her, and his Company, 


were taken Priſoners: And when the Dutch 
alſo had in vain attempted to get her off the 
Sands, at Night they burnt her down. This 
unfortunate ſtriking of ſo many of our Ships 
upon the Sands, gave the Dutch fo great an 
Opportunity of deſtroying the Duke's Fleet, 


as they have Cauſe never to forgive the 


Commmanders that made no greater Advan- 
rage of it, where all might have been loſt, if 


| the Enemy had been brave enough t. to have 


ee for * eee 624 ate 


XVI 80 50 as che Durs obſerv'd the 


Approach of the Prince with his Squadron; 
1 Ruyter ſent over a Party of between twen- 
ty and thirty Ships to Leet him, himſelf with 
the reſt of the Fleet ſtill attending the Moti- 

on of the Duke. This Squadron of the 


Dutch Fleet ſent out againſt the Prince, 
ſeem'd to provoke him to the Combat; but 
becauſe he as yet knew nothing of the State 


of the Fleet, he reſolv'd firſt to ſend off a 


Veſſel to the Duke, letting him know, that, 


if _ thought: it moſt adviſable, he would 


k 
8 — 


” , 4 f 


he 'L It. £ of 


mn 5 8 
p to Winduw and, and engage that 1 

Party had been feat out to brave him. By, 

laſt the Veſſel ſhould not zeturn Time enough | 


| tO; prevent the Prince's Intention, his Grace 
irſt ſu d two Guus from the Raya Charles, to 


give bim Warning, and made a Waft with his 
Flag; and preſently after the Meſſenger re · 


4 alſo, aud b * his Highneſs Canti- 


on from the Duke, That he ſhould by w 


means bear up the Squadron, there being 4 


dangerous Sand, called the Galloper, Hing 


jeral of his vwn 


between them, where ſe- 


 Shihs had that: Day been ſiranded; and, at 


one End of it, the Royal Prince was bt: 


That the Appearance of the Dutch Squadron 


in that Place, was only to tempt them into 


the Bavks and draw them into the toil. Up: 


on this Advice, bis Highneſs preſently = 

away to the Northward, to get clear of thoſe 
dangerous Sands, and, by the Evening, made 
his Way to the Duke's Fleet, the Enemy all 


1 this while, not offering them any Diſturbance, 


Bur ſo ſoon as they ,perceiv'd. — — Engliſh 


Fleet to be all join d, the Dutch Fleet pe- 
ſenci 


haled Hole 0 Wind, and went 
out of S. 


vn. 'Tax Duke preſoarly bats 0 to 10 | 
"on 


Gant AL Mex. 383 


tend bis Highneſs in the Royal: Fame c,; and 

gaye him au Account of all Particulars in theſe | 
three Days Action. That Night a Council 
olf War was walled, where were preſent Sir 
Thomas Hllyn, Sir C. hriſtopber Mings, Sir 
Edward Spyag, and the reſt; where it was 
2 That it would be ' injurious to bit 
Majeſty's Honour, aud the Reſolution of the 
a Fleet, to let the Dutch go off thus, 
| and 16 carry home with chem the Appearance 
of an Advantage : That the Conrage of the 
Samen war Hill brave and high, aud the 
Fleet in Heart; their Hulls being all un- 
| touch'd, and the Damage hitherto being anly 
in their Shrouds and Tackling: That by the 
working f the Euemy s Fleet all this Day, 
when our Fleet retreated, it appear d, th 
they were o much higher in VO 5 
| yy were lower in Conrage. 


XVIII. Ir was bore "eſoly 4 7 bat, a 
next Day, they would fall npon the Enemy; 
and that hir Hoghne/#s Squadron, being 
freſh and untouched, and being the beſt ſail- 


Ig the er Poul load the 
Van. 2 | 


N Ako on n Monde by ah Mag Tom 
| | Light, 


1 7” t, t 


4 ter, recovered Sight of their Fleet, who made 
their Way at Leiſure towards their own 
Coaſts. For, beſides what Damage they had 


Engliſh Fleet, that they could not eaſily be. 


they. might more eaſily run into their on 


ward of the Engliſh Fleet; which, coming 


for the F * Sir — Mings 1 


. . 7 F E of \ 


85 agliſb Fleet was under Sail; and, 
ch being gone out of Sight, they flood 


51. 


dhe D. 
their Courſe after them; and ſome while af. 


themſelves known and ſeen in the Engliſh 
Fleet after thing Days Fighting; they had re- 
cciv'd from [Priſoners they had taken 
out of the Royal Prince, ſuch an Account of 
the ſhattered and diſabled Condition of the 


bee the Prince and Duke would have the 
to purſuę them; or, if they ſhould, 
— the Dutch had ſo. much Wit in their An- 

ger, as they would endeavour to fight near 
home, whereby, upon any Diſadvantage, 


Stations, whither the erde could not cafi- 
„ eee e e a 


XX. By in of che, Clock the En g 
Fleas was got up to them; and the Dan, 
having got the Weathergage, put their Fleet 
in Readineſs, and fell into à Line all to Wind- 


up in very good Order, ranged themſelves 


iſ 0¹ eg th 1 7 Vas,” nes * 2 0 the Print e: 
fray, bad the'E Duke « 0 if Alle he 
BRO ' — was s begr 2 with that Cou- 
On _— with *1 
the firſt Boye ! — rat r than the 
fourth. In the firſt —— | Minge, at W 
dme other Ships, were diſabled, and preſent- 
ly enfor d to quit the Fight, whilſt the 
Prince 1 — 2 found | 


208: Ons r, 


1 ſtout Ship, boldly nt to board him, - 
coming _ — . that his 6 Shroud Arms 


on him 1⁰ — 4 Volly: aſs his ſmall. Shor, 
that he immediately fell a Stern, and appear'd 
b ore nor any other to ſucceed in his 
Room : And Trump receiv'd ſuch another 
Broad fide from” the Royal Catherine,' as ut- 
F him for the reſt of the Day. But 
be Dutch, knowing his Grace's Squadron, 

by the former three Days Fight, to be weak · 
t than the reſt, charged fiercely upon him, 
ms CE = 


* 
pl 
2 
1 
x 
2 1 
2 


38 6 | % The 14 


his extraordinary 
rage, ſo end t the Force of his Squadron, 


on auen «Abb ang oe fg the Durch were 
N fought ſo low, that Part of the Fleet began 


ſerv'd by 


time ſtobdd by the Leeward of the Enemy 


4 8 1 F E P of © 7 7 


and gave him no Breath, whilſt the Duke, by 
Conduct and infinite Cou- 


1 vigor 1's ſuch Ships as were in 
and Strength, and warily theltering 
nick as were CINE ow 8 eilt gain- 
ro Nd OE mo | men: II yh EY ye” 


Nn ee 13 5 Prince bike had, in 
this Day's Engage ment, five times paſſed 
he "Darth Fleet, at e- 

Impreſſion up- 


in ſecuring themlielves by retreating; 
amon —— 4e Ruyter, who, to dil 
Flight, or to ſecure it, made Shew 
28 if he would rack" again; which being ob- 
the Pri ince, who, towards Evening, 

with eight or ten of his Frigats had got to 
Windward of the Enemy's Fleet, he was fe- 
ſoly d to beas in upon them, and at one Puli 
to compleat the Victory, by putting them to 
the W At the ſame Inſtant his Main- top- 
maſt, being terribly ſhaken, came all by the 
Board; and the Duke, who alſd at the ſame 


with his — Order to tank and 


Jou 


PETS I. 


S 7 = T2? 


S = 2 


SNA 


par prot Belt of t 


aſt Pag, — wo. Shors in his Powder- 
they could 


Room between Wind and Water, 
not preſently be ſtopped: His Main · top naſt 


— fo; ſharter'd by a Shot through it, 


that he was ford d to lower his Top- fail; and 
at the fame Time his Fore-maſt had receive 
" Shots, char ie diſabled !fof/fur- | 
vice a e 
the 2 — gain d luc ) Dp 


houlc — done, g purlud by: — of 
imbler Frigats whilſt their PRs and 
the Light ad In this nenen che 


Bagh Side wen, let 5 


ba ade Dur Joſt) and the Eh, 
2 


grappled with a Datch Ship, ee 
2oarded and taken. TWO . 

— Dake ought 

to an Anchor in the Gum: fleet; but — 
part of them ſo totn and ſhatter'd, 
hat chey bats — —e— 
bonourable Marks of a ſevere Engagement. 
From thence the Fleet was diſtributed into'ſe- 


der Harbours, to be refitred with —_— 


Cc» 


ny haſten'd t th 


Welcome, by thoſe extraordinary Services 


conſidered. "His Enemies, thongh they ac- 
| knowledg'd his C 
did great! 
geſt,” That à little 


be came off well, ver he" intrufed Fortune 
with à greater Stock tha 
Put into her Hay, 
all diſcerning Perſons, had another Opinion 


nm in it : That he had thereby given 


Majeſty: To whom . were the more 


or Thazagds ney” w_ per, eee 


, 


XXIII Tis Addon of it Duke S, in a 


: venturing to W the Durch after the divid- 


ing the Fleet, was by ſeveral Men variouſly 


ourage and Generoſity, yet 
y accuſe his Diſcretion; and did ſig · 
[ay of the Coward uu. 
4 ſafer Ingredient m 4 3 than fuch 

waſt and tranſtendent Raſh Aud tho 


Han a Wiſe Man would 
I. But his Majeſty, and 


of this extraordinary Action: That it was 
grounded on the gr ateft Reaſon and Nec / 
ſity, and that the Honour of the Nation was 


a © 41 __ i a 0 — 


che greateſt Inſtance of his own ant the Eng 
lift — ; and had raiſed the Reputt- 


iow l his Mai. K Naval Force to aich 
s Hei 0 4 


| — 40 ma de and de 


ä Governogs: diſcern'd their own: Danger and 


Geena, anz. 405 
lory, as a, render him: more 


Height ff 


oY 17 3 7 1 "SU 1 0 J. 3 775 , 7 Fi 1 
I” — 7 4 WS. S: 1 4 ; * : . 
7 7 © 8596 the : 5 7 2 3 2 747 . * 5 * 'S 15 * 
. 4 ** 

5 it 0 * ö 
V. AND, fm wen will heax he, Qpinion 
Dutch þ themſelves, who, in this 12. 

on v4 * 4 a 


it is 3 that IS En. 


ne of. fifty Frigats againſt all the Force 
they could make, gaye: chem a greater Appre- 
— and Dread of his Majeſty's Power at 


ges, than all the Victories which had been 


gain d on them: S0. thar, though * Con- 
fidence of the common People was to be 
with Bubble and Brandy, er their 


Inability; and that his Majeſty's Fleet, under 
| ndudt Wi Phra 


fiirs, and who was never _— of wok Re- 
ſpect to his Majeſty, and the Engliſh Nati- 
on) acknowledge to Sir William T-mple, his 
Majeſty's: Ambaſſador then to the States of 


Holland, ec That, by this Engagement of the 


Duke of Albemarle, we had gain d more 
a Honour to our Nation, and to the invin- 
| cc * 1 «cible 


— — 2 4 n 1 I IO CONE: 
. 5 0 — 1 „ —— PEO - 
py 


| =L r tor a Vid 


9 4 Durch u never er vm 110 — on 


« the other two Days, after the Diſadvantage 


4 of the firſt; and he beliey'd'no other Na- 
| tion was 2 of ir. lere the Engliſh,” 


darin g in * En- 


| — ter; kbar they. were willing to 
ry: So that it was not on- 
as 3 by thi own) People, with | 


1 ber was pub ad in dhe Courts of 
ſreign Princes, w whd, being better inform d 


XXV. Th Seas 3 in FE kuterim ol fe- 
repaird their Fleet with ſuch extraordinary 


Diligence and Diſpatch, (in which Inſtance 


only they may be thought to exceed thei! 
5 4 E: £2 * Neighbours) 


- — 


— 
Dre r 


— EL. oe. oe ra. 


drew off, not for Sea Room, as the Eugliſb | 


Ok ITY A L Mons „ 
hbours) as they were "gain got ont: to 
er — vidtorigus in 
— 8 Engagement, came and lay upon the 
Engliſh Coaſts: Witch which, not only their 


own People, but the {editions and diſcontent- 
ed in England were well ſatisfy d. Vet all 
this was but Pretence, and a Copy of their 


Countenance For the Durch very well Knew. 
chat his Majeſty's Fleet would not yet be rea- 
dy; and ſo ſoon as it was, they preſentiy 


uſed to do from the Coaſts of Holland, out, 
 cale they were forced to an Engageme 


Rende⸗ o Buoy of the Men 
the jorge im Pain "9 Dd July 22, faild'to 
the Gun: fleet. The next Day they ſtood to 3.23 
Seq after the Enemy's Fleet, who kept under 
gail before them towards their own Coalts. 
And on Fuly 25. by fix in the Morning, got 54. 25 
within two Le of the Duteh Fleet, who 


dem wpon ſailing in very good Order, brought 
L&C 4 | themſelves 


— 


- 
—ͤ—nͤẽ—ñ— — V 3 my 


TIED p * 
P e 


. 


| withethems This 
not long, yet, for ane Time of its continuance, 
was tharp'enough: In which the Durch had 


dent an; ihe . 


2; both ſides | 


| 42 _ 17 2 er 9 ££: * 


une Nn e and ob 


p f a ag\d/ with the Enemy Wan. nd the Red 


advancing upon the Body of the 
Muehe Fleet led 5 de Ru zyter, and then the 
Blue Squadron: undertook the Zealand Divi- 

ſo that by Noon all our Fleet was in 
zncounter, though it laſted 


ral Ships ſunk and fired; and ſome of our 


—— the Royal Gatharme, the St. George, 
pert, and another Ship of the Mhite 


wawere ſo diſabled as they came out 


neſs and the Duke being both in the Na 
Charles bore up to Admiral de Ruyter 


within Musket Shot, and fought him hand to 
| A * time, till __ came out of 


tber 


* 2 * 


4 


— 


— nine and, ten in © : 


pang — — adde in the 
Head of erer coming cloſe up to 


of the eng by to mend. His High- 


A 
. * 8. a 
—— 1 © al n 3 WES IL 1 


their Line to refit their Tackling,. 3 hs. OY 

place to Sir; Joſeph: Jordan in che Royal Ho- | 
vereigu, WhO .ply'd/ him ſo Warmy, that he | | 
ſhot down his Top-maſt, and ſunk his Fire- 41 

ip by his ſide. In half an Hours Time the 


5 4 
Prince and Duke ſtood in again, engaging te 1 
| 


| GENE RAL Moxxk. 5 


ſecond Time ſo cloſely with de. Ruyter, as, 


having receiv' di ſeventeen Shot in his Ship | | 
under the Water, and double the Number. in | 
| his Boll n ooh was glad to give. _ | 43808 
Charles was only! in her ackling; 1 


they had no Ropes nor Steerage left, bur f ſhe 189 | 
was towed out of the Line by Boats,, his 
Highneſs and his Grace removing into the 
Royal Fames 3 About this time Sir Robert 
Holmes, having loſt both his Top - maſts, lay 
by a while to repair. And now the Reſolu- 
tion, being firſt diſabled, was burnt by a Fire- 
ſhip ſent upon her by Van Trump Captain 
Hannam, who. commanded in her, bravely - 
clear d himſelf of the Fire-ſhip; but the Flame 
was advanced ſo far, as he could not poſſibly 
preſerve his Ship; yet himſelf and Ship's 
Company ſaved themſelves by Boats which 
were ſent off to them from ſuch Ships as lay | 
neareſt. For ſome Time before, the Enemy — 
15 obſery'd to give Ground; between one ES 
. . and 


> . 
— — I U—-- k P — 4 A 
res. 44 tl Sie 


- 33 n 


. 
2 


44 


. 


9 . _ + A x — 2 
eee ee 


„ u. U TFE 

dyo of the Clock the an was already got 
off with all pe we chey could make; and 
bar acta he 'Tacks to ſe 


bn Captain & 
Haes.. And ee of — a ſtout 
new. Ship, of ſuxty:fix Guns, was alſo yo 
and both of chem fir d by che Eng liſb, be 
eameſt in the Puiſuit. All this While Sir 75 
nemy Smirh-with the Blue Squadron ſtood 
engaged. with Nan Tramp and the Zealand 
Divifion, till, roward Night, they alſo made 
all ae Sail they could to the — 
atid the Bus Suadron in the F wfaie till Night 
parted chem. Att. e 1 Falk E 1 
tet 18 LN Nb "as e e 
uf E ID ek 0 1d 
er 2; 9H T7 g Fe Ogg: * eee eee | = 
wart 1 lit? 91 ths whom! t C 2 CHAP. F 


£ 
* DE 


"4 


Sv 1 | Moi 


1 37 ee ed N ia! 


*$ 
39 F 

6 7 : 

A N # x = 


* 
* +: 1 


a} ag Ot SME 3 lin! cif writer 
11 "be lier — into te ow 
Harlous Iv. Ne be 

are ew 1. Duk | 


and fifty Sipe in" the | arbodr; A, 
The Dutch pus 40 Sea again, und ſail 
= _ bs rench — in rh 


"14 F Tr haſt angle 
4 "HE Dutch! Pleer G Jodi 

© Highneſs and che Duke — 
gave Order to Sir Thomas Allen in the Ruyel 
Oak, with two other Frigats, to keep fleur 
them, and to put up Lights chat might giye 
tice,” in caſe” the 

Courſe; "Which was ſo effectually perform ut 
Wente ood found himſelf not muck above 
Musket ſhot from de Ruyter's Lee; and then 
tacked towards our own Fleet. This Morn- 


ined as Lis; and made all the Sail they | 
could 


e 'Ehemy- ſhotld alter Hs 
Mt Light of the Me ging, Sie 


ing early the Prince and Duke drew the 


ch, 


v i 
" 
** * 
* 
% 
1 >. 
4 1 8 
d 4 * 


Was ſo little Wind, that 


ee the Þ 1 


could, to get up Wen the Path; but ther 
hey could not poſ⸗ 

ſibly reach them. But while the Ships, for 
waar of Wind, could not make ſail, the Fay. 
Cum a little Pleaſure· boat built at Harwich 
the Service of Prince Rupert, by the 

er Oars, Where che 22 for want 


brit Ji 9 ber two „ little Guns to thee 


mital-having ſpent ſeveral Guns to no pur. 


poſe upon her, till at laſt he gave her two or 


three Shot between Wind and Water, with 


} which meg — ee, nd let the 


| had 5 often 


to ſtand another Encounter, but bore 


away before them. The Zug 
ing them over ſeveral Banks and Flats, till the 


great Ships came to ſix Fathoms Water, and 


the leſs continu'd in Purſuit within two Miles 
of their 'own. Shores. And; had there been 


Biba | | Wind 


— 


1 one ſid iral's Ship Broad. 
de do — Fo alot 'an Hour; The 


d. Afterwards, che Wind a little in. 
ce and Duke made their 
wards de — who found him- i 
q Aulanled by * (eſterday? 8 Engagement, 

that both his Men and Ships were out of 


liſh Fleet chal- 


+» Fam 


GENERAL MOR k. 397 


Wind enough in this Retreat; both de 
ter; and ſeveral of his Sbips, 
been taken or deſtroy d. But there being ic 
great a Calm, the Durch Ships, drawings leis 
Water, made their Way faſter chan: the Eg 


liſo could purſue them, and ſo eſeaped into 
the n et of Zealanu.o. BN Ji 
did Bus oy 
pt Taz. 1 Day Siri, Jenemiab Smith, 
with the Blue Squadron, preſſetl ſochard up- 
on Van Trump and his Diviſion, chat he beat 
em os into "Winks own amd, of the cel. 
| bs W N G noe Dil 
175 + fff (4 i, 


UI. In is 83 the FHreeglunu 


vyhole Fleet were eſtimated about four thou- 
land Men killed, two thouſand wounded. The 
i manders of Note that fell, in this Fight 
were, Everaſon of Zealand; Termick\Hide 
Admiral of Freezhland, and Conders his Vic 
Admiral, * about * of their een 


nen ee e enrol v roads An 
£1241}, 97 onto eg 440 4; __ 


w. Taz —y on — Engliſh: ſide! was 
greatly diſproportionable, having loſt but feẽã 


in the Fight, and not above Ta hundred 


wounded, 


and Zealand Squadrons were chought ro haye 
loſt the better half of their Men. In their 


» 
——— W att nm A — | . 
p * — — — ü 


her in abe — Captain — only 
in the Breda dangerouſly wounded. And but 
one Ship wanting, namely the Re/0/ution, of 
which we haye given Account belore. 
1. 4 Nez W. TTL ERA J | 
ff, Ish7.,N-Dus Day. ** — Fight. he. Prince 
abe, ate Council of War, xefolv'd to 
1 ſend home thoſe few Ships that were diſabled, 
/  and\to ply upon the Dutch Coaſts, in Expe: 
it ctation of ſome further Advantage upon the 
* Enemy, who could not make this Engage- 
oc oy Suge the People for a Victory, 
very Doxis the; — Fleet 


| 


WIS: 7 ; 1 kd wh; 


VI. 1 99 3 —— —— and 


Refolotion, of his Majeſty's Fleet content it 
ſelf to le idly upon the Enemy's Coaſts; 
but the Prince and Duke having receiv d In- 
: — hg from a 1 Dutch Cap- 
tain, how gaſy it was to make an Attempt up- 
on the Iſland of Schelling, and Town of 
Brandaris, commanded Sir Robert Holmes 
| EC] ko 8⁰ * that Expedition; who —_— 


Za ond a Vw, Sans fees _— 2 ens. wan — HM Dn CORY kn... => 


IS — — gm tude. 


Z NEAT Mok. 399 
begun him eleven Foot Companies, 


Morning early enter d the Chanel; and be · 
ing come into Schelling Road, Sir Roberr 
and the Captains with him, obſerving à con- 
ſderable Fleet of about an hundted and twen- 
ty Sail, riding thick and cloſe together at 
Anchor in the D/y, with few Men of War a+ 


mong them for their Aſſiſtance; reſolvd to 


attempt the firing of them: Wherenpon Sir 
Nobert Holmes left the Advice and Hamp- 

ſhire Frigats without, to ſecure the Buoys, 
leſt the Enemy 
take them away, and ſo hazard their Retreat 
in an unknown Chanel. The Pembroke and 
three Ketches amd Boats, with one Foot Com- 
pany, and Sir Robert Holmes himſelf in the 
little Fun · Fun chat had lately braved de Ray. 


ter, with the five Fire-ſhips a- head, went in 


two Dutch Men of War, and ſomie other 
Ships, that, upon the Alarm, ſtood to de- 
ſend the Fleet. The Boats then were ſent to 
burn the reſt of the Ships ; which was diſ- 


patch d with ſuch Succeſs, that preſently all 


their Ships were on Fire, except à Guines: 
man of twenty four Guns, and three ſmall 


Privateers, 


2 — 2 


ht ſmall Frigats, with five. Fire- ſhips, 
3 3 Ketches and Boats, in the 


- * 
— — — — ——— ———— 
* ** — p 


a yy” ——ů——̃ ht —— — ,, 
7 


y ſhould ſend ſome Veſſels to 


| upon. the Dureh Fleet, arid preſently fird 


| ſome of them found grea 
having deſtroy'd more than an hundred and 


— 


455 RC; LIFE of 


Privateers, that, bella together i in the nar- 
row of the Channel, preſerv d themſelves, 
and five Sail more that were behind them, ſo 
as the: Boat mona not 1 WE Oe 


2 


8 3 * Fg 


Road, with ſive Foot-Companies, to prevent 
any Surptizal from the Enemy, ' whilſt the o- 


ther five Companies went on Shore upon the 


Hand of Schelling for the Town of Bran- 


daris; which, in half an Hour's Time, was 
all on a Flame, and above a thouſand Houſes 

were confumed. The Spoil and Plunder both 
in the Ships and Houſes, were wholly aban- 


doned to the Sea-· men and Soldiers, where 


fifty Sail of the Enemy's Ships, Sir Robert 


Holmes returned ſafely, having not above 
twelve Mey kill'd or wounded in the Action. 


And, being come back to the Fleet, the Prince 


and Duke fone Sir Philip Howard, who was 
one of thoſe eleven Captains that went on 


this — to 4 75 his * an Ac- 
count thereof. | 


_—_ 


vn. Tun The ger, Loet Dragon, Ga 
kad; and $7 abs lakes] ſtood in Schelling 


>at Booties. And, 


VIII T HE 


1 = 


k _ 
* —— > 


| . ae e 40 
VIII. Tur Prince and Duke continued fill 
n the Dutch Coaſts, intercepting their | 
Trade and Ships; and, about the middle 
Auguſt, returned with their Fleet to their 
own Shores, having ſpent all their Proviſion, Wi 
and much of their Ammunition ; both which 
were to be ſupply d again at home. But ſome | 


— 1 8 an. 7 1 
ETP 4 


* rr rern 


Veſſels for Intelligence were ſtill conti · d on : 
the Durth Coaſts; and, toward the End of 1 
this Month, brought Account, that the Ene- | | 
my was coming out with a Fleet of ei hry © 3 

Sail; who took this Advantage of the Eg. 1 31 
1h Fleet's Retreat, to get out with all the 4 
Haſte they could make, and ſailed towards > | 
the French Harbours, hoping to Join with 1 
their new Ally, who hicherro had Wo: them 1 
,, F Ro if 1 4 | | 


I Tas News of he" Enemy 8 Fleet 
coming forth, was quickly brought to the 
Prince and Duke of Albemarle, Who made 
all the Haſte poſſible to get the Fleet in Rea- 
dineſs to. fall on them. And, about the firſt 5. 1. 
of September, came up ro them, having 
gotten French Harbour in the Bay of Fra- 
thr, where the Engliſh Fleet flood” fea- 
dy to- engage them; or the Enemy kept 

„„ themſelves 


@ 


2 

| 
$7 

1 
43 
5 


owes 


W ο⏑ r 
Nee ht 


Oe ee er e e aries 
{ths 8 nm ee eee 
1 


E n 


32 


1 W A 1 


A „ 


Eaſterly Wind, ind whe Eagle could not 


402 Te LIFE of 
: themſelves cloſe i in me FOO: The Wea. 


conveniently weather it; and, perceiving the 
Enemy not willing to fight, the Prince and 


Dube retir d to St. Hellew's Bay, Thar being 


Station, where they 
the joining of the Dutch 


might intercept 
and French Fleet, then lying about Rocbel. 


& C S 


* — Ws k 0 
— ., 

1 2 ) 
k 1 7 

. ” WC L / & 

, — ere 
1 * 
Y a — 78 7 


1 


1 


| GexenAs Mons. ; - 7 


| ic HA p. NXXXI. * * | 
I The Fi ire of: London. II The Duke « com- ad 
nanded home: for his Aſfibance upon that 5 
Occaſion, III. No farther Action of Sea 
this Tear. IV. The Methods taken nent 
Tear to bring the L Dutch 0 /ome Action, or - ' 
to Peace. V. The Diſtribution of the 3 | | 
_ Engliſh Fleet. VI. The Dutch make an | 
Attempt #pon Chatham, but afterwards 


— 
—_ — —e— U—U— m.Ä A ery ern — 
_— 


=» we "> —_—_— AE... * 


„ 
2K ˙*— — — — . — 


3 


it to 4 Peace. VII, VIII, IX. The | 
Duke taken ill, his Diſtemper, the Courſe | | 
of it. X. He returns to London, grows \ | 
worſe. XI. Hes Advice to the Members 1 {| 
Parliament, and Miniſters of State, \ | 
who come to ſee him. XII, XIII. Marries 3 
his Son to @ Daughter of the Duke of | | 
Newcaſtle, -XIV. Sequeſters himſelf from | | 


all publick Affairs. XV. His Death. 
XVI. Some of bis moſt important Attions 

enumerated, - XVII. His Death univer- - 
ſally lamented. XVIII. His Funeral cele- 

brated at the King's Charge. XIX. 4 © f 
Phyſical Account of the Author's concern- OA 
ing the Cauſe of his Death. XX. His Bo- 
<& leer in Crate at Somerler Heere. FH 


49 Dd "0 b 1 WHILST 


* 
- +". eqn emer: we ory oe. 


* OTE ds A ao. A * „ 


HILST the Fortune of England, 
| by lo. many Naval Succeſſes . 
beds” run thus high upon the Water, it was 
if 15 ſuddenly arreſted by a fatal Fire at home; 
8%. 2 Which about this Time ( Sthrember 2.) be 

l gan, and, in three Days time, burnt down 


FR the greateſt Part of the City; which the (i 

'T; - tizens computed at above one thouſand three | 

; hundred Houſes, beſides ſo great a Loſs o 

| | _ Goods and Wares, as can never be duly eſi | 

. mated. And, after the Aſtoniſhment of ti 

| |  Conflagration it ſelf, the next Wonder is, tha ö 
wy the Minds of Men have been no ways clearly 
S377 fatisfied about "_ Neige or Continuanc 

vE ons It: 

u. ArTeR ſo great a Blow upon che Mt a 

. ls of the Nation, it pleaſed his Majcſi 

1 ao. command the. Duke of Albemarle tro x 

A | Sea, to be near his Perſon and Counſels in : 

18: diſtracted a Time; who accordingly can | 

back to London about t two Days after ty g 

Fire was quenched. | 

II. Ir might Bebe been here expedct 1 


I | that the Dutch Fleet, now in Conjundit 


GNA Mok. Jes 
wich France, would have taken this Opp 
tunity of fighting his Majeſty 's Navy, which 

10, all 6 while ſtood ready for them. But the , 2913 

„nie Engagement, upon dividing the Fleet, 1 

ad coſt them ſo dear, they were not willing — 

"Wl to try a ſecond Experiment; and were fo far 

be fam coming to a Fight: after the Union with 

i the French Ships, chat, rhough bis Majeſty —&& | 

kept out his Fleet till the Seaſon was ge 79 

yet the Enemy trifled away the Time with- N 

out coming to Action: So that his Grace {| 

went no more this Year. to the F let, but = 1 

continued at home, aff ling with the . WL [ | 

\Conncil for hiding) 5 the, City. T7... | 


* ” - 
— —— — mes — — a 


* 
- 
ea en. ORE —— 0s > 
> : 
. 


W. 1 fon the. next. 5. ki Majeſty, 5 4 
having taken other Methods, Was pleas d 1 1 
excuſe him from any further Service at Se: Wi 
For the Durch were contriving as dilatory a | 
War with his. Majeſty of Great Britain, as 
they had formerly manag'd with their natu- 
ral Prince Philip II. to weary him with De- 
lays. So that in England there was more 
Fear about the Continuance and Charge of 
the War, (eſpecially after the burning of the 
City) than for the Event of it. This Year 1667 
Ucrefore it was ale g, inſtead of dancing 
D d 3 Attendance 


„ — — 44 TIES CE - e 


. * y 
o 
** TIE) TEA * 
4 OY * 


«oO after e Sol Fleet, to tum 


* . N. 8 * 2 * * 
„ . — ͤ — 
r " ee e * * * — — Wee * — 3 s 2 on Soo 
R — þ 
4 | 
. R 1 


— > . 4 it; * 
P — OW GS in * ro 
= n 8 PR 
—— a . * * > or * #4 het + 


Ships | 


_ Caſte, which col | 


Inſtructions had been duly proſecuted. But 


the War upon their Trade, and interc 
their Commerce; whereby the Durch Fleet 
would be dre, either to follow their 


Blows wore Tiley: or ſubmit to a Peace, 


v. Ts TIN. to this Reſolution, his Maje- 
17 had raken Care to ſecute the Britiſ 
Seas, by a ppointing a convenient Number of 
to lye upon the Coaſts about Srorland, 
and another Squadron to ply about Port. 
mouth; fo chat neither Way the Merchant. 
Ships ſhould be able to paſs without Hazard 


The reſt of his Majeſty's Fleet was put into 


the Harbour at Chatham; and, for their Se. 
curity and Defence, Order Was given for the 
better fortifying S herrn h, at the Mouth of 


the River, for the planting of Guns at Upnor | 
manded the Stream; and 


O ſecure the River . 1 a 1 and 


et 1 dudtile 3 
nurle was neither the Au- 


N thor nor Piombters which yet might have 


facceeded much 'better, if — Part of the 


the 


* EC PS3 31 797 * * 
1 " 7 1 N * 8 
N * . 
Ws 
L — 


| Grfnnal Monx. 5 40 


84 hatham, and the Parts a- 
bout it, unable to make a Defence, took 


the Dutch, find 


. thoſe Advantages upon the Water, which it 
was impoſſible for the Duke of Aulemarle, 


and thoſe — ho Forces, which, to the Number 


of one thouſand five hundred Foot, and five 


or ſix hundred Horſe, were ſent from Lon. 
don thither -under his Conduct, to deprive 
them of. Wherefore doing as much as could 
be effocted by Land againſt au Enemy at Sea, 
the Duke ſecured the Coaſt and the Country; 

and, letting them know that Albemarle was 
{till alive, diſpoſed the Dutch to a Peace; 


June. 


which was concluded hetween his Majeſty 


and the States not long after in the ſame Sum- 
mer. After which, having no further Occa - 
ſion to uſe his Sword, he return d to enjo 


the Benefit of that Peace, which his Courage 


and Conduct had helped to re 
VII. FrRoM which Time he divided him- 


ſelf between his Majeſty's Service (which in 


any the leaſt Inſtance he would never neg- 
| bet) and his own private Affairs; till he ar. 
rived to the ſixtieth Year of his Age, 


vn. Axp now chat firm and good Con- 
Dd * ſtitution 


1668 


—— 


2 
—ͤ—4ä—ö ———— wV!— rh es 4 mr 
« 4. 
ar 0 „ +, 


ä rr 


4 

1 
3 

EE | 
F 


* 
„„ 


PTY — 28 : 


408 LIFE of 


ſtitution of Body, That great and conſtant 
Health, which he had ſo long enjoyed, be- 


gan to impair in him; which Decays were 


more haſtily promoted, by the Hardſhips of 
a Soldier's Life in his younger” Days; and 
were further advanced, by the continual 


Weight of publick Cares in his declining Age 
His general Indiſpoſition of Body diſcover d 


it ſelf in the Beginnings of a Dropſy, againſt 
which no timely Care was employ'd : For, 
though his Grace was very well pleas'd with 


the Reaſons and Diſcourſe of Phyſicians, yet, 


through an uninterrupted Health, he had a 


EkKEind of Averſeneſs to Medicines, or Methods 
5 of Phyſt ick. In this Condition he retir d 


himſelf to his Seat at New-Hall i in Eher, in 
Hopes that the freſh Air might have ſome 
good Effect upon his Body; and, by this Re. 


treat and Receſs from * Buſineſs, he 


wg recoyer his Tre. 


re" Waich” en Scber wil, and his 
Droply and Shortneſs of Breath ſtill increaſ- 
ing, he was perſuaded, by the Importunity 
of his Ftiends, and particularly by one who 


had been an Officer in his Army, to ule a 
Pil, which, at that Time, had ſome Reputa. 


tion 


Grxtnai Monk. 469 


tion for caring the Dropſy, and was chen in 


the Hands of a Perſon that had formerly been Dr Ser- 


a Soldier under him in Scotland; and being 


informed, that the Remedy might be try d 


without any ſtrict Method or Confinement; 
he was the more inclinable to make ſome Ex- 
periment of it. Which, though it never ef. 


fected any thing worthy the Name of a Cure, 


yet, upon the frequent Uſe thereof, it ſo diſ- 
Gag the Deluge of wareriſh Humour, as 
the ative Parts of his Blood began again to 
recover; ſo that the Difficulty of his breath- 
ing, and the. ſwelling in his Body and Legs, 
were very much relieved. 


they were ready to perſuade him into the Con- 


fidence of a greater S den e "Gar" chere 


ey was. 


X. Wren this Opinion, at hey End of * 60 
Summer, he returned back to London: Bur, 


upon the Approach of the Winter, his Blood 


declining again with the Year, his Dropſy 


encreaſed upon him, with the ſame Accidents 


as before; nor could his former Remedy, 


which, by the Opinion of curing him before, 
was grown to a great Reputation, avail any 


thing 


| And all Men, be- | 
ing ſo greatly defirous of his Life and Health, 


— 9 _ W 6 — 


3 rr —U 2 — — * Js 


POP TOS Or ger eo yt | 
1 


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ug to preſerve his Grace, and its own Cre. 


A * /by ml OOF 


by XI. Tas: Noiſe of Thy Relapſe, and the 
imminent: Danger of it, being quickly 
ſpread about che Town, all his Friends and 
Retainers came to make their Viſits to him. 
alſo of the Houſe of Lords, and of 

nons, then fitting, did frequently 

and, having accuſtomed himſelf 


| 8 2 * he could not Part with 


in the midſt of his own Difficulties. 


ip — chat little Breath he had left to ſup- 


port himſelf, diſcourſed always very carncft- 


; by: with them about his Majeſty's Service, and 


d and Settlement of the Common- 


—. conjuring them #9 preſerve always 
42 good Underſtanding between the two Hou- 


ſes; and that his Majeſty's Crown and Go. 


verument ought never to ſuffer any Incon- 


uenience hy "the Paſſions or Prejudice of 
_—_ > he: n 1 near 7 e to tale 
ee E 


XXII. In cds his 4 cat {when che King 


| ſent continually, as well as the Duke of Zul, 


to know his State) he Was frequently * 
Dy 


i 


Friend the 


by his moſt intimate and principal 
| Earl of Bath, and alſo by the Lord Arling- 
ton; to both whom he recommended the 

Care of his Seryants: For, as to his own 
Concernments, he had brought them into a 


narrow Room; having now but one mortal 
of - 


Care upon him, which was the —— 
his only Son, whom. he was likely to leave 
young, being then abour ſixteen or ſeventeen 
| Years of Age: So that his Grace was very de- 
firous of living ſo long as to provide a Match 
for him in ſome ancient and loyal Family, 


which were the principal Qualifications - he 


aimed at. To that End, ſome Weeks before 
his Death, he'enter'd into a Treaty with the 
Duke of Neætcaſtle, with whom he contract- 
ed a Match for his Son with the Lady Eli- 
zabeth, eldeſt Daughter of the {aid Duke, a 


fair and virtuous Lady. By which Alliance 
he united the Glories of the ancient Houſes 
ol Newcaſtle and Dorcheſter, Cavendiſh 


10 Drau. wes * own Ducal Coro- 


Weakneſs, the Approach of bis 


creaſing 
. he ane be more Haſte to conſum- 
| mate 


. 4 — 
PPP 


ED 


@9) 


412 
mare the mig To chat ( Bod, Decem. 
Dee.27 her 27. his Grace employ d the moſt Part of 
the Day in giving Inſtructions to his Council 
at Law, for the berter GP his Eſtate upon 
his Son, and the aſſigning à Jointure upon 
the young Lady. And hree D Days after, be. 
b.. zo ing December zo. the Marriage was ſolem- 
niz d in the Duke's Chamber; where, with 
that little Strength he had he deliver'd the 
Bride from his on Hand i into "the Arms of 


his ns! 


„ XIV. nn the ene was PP he 
5 ſeed very much pleas d that he had lived 
| to ſee the Accompliſhment of it, being the 
faſt of his humane Cares. After which he ſe. 
Aueſtred himſelf from * mortal Attics never 
| to de reſumed more. HUGE 2 


, We = 


8 xv. Rin! now a ertrethe e Difficulty of 
#288 Prin which had all along been the — 
1 uneaſy Part of his Sickneſs, increaſed fo vio- 
1 Et: lently upon him, that he could not lye down 
iin his Bed, but entertain'd himſelf only with 
ſome ſhort Sleeps in his Chair. In which Poſture 
he dy'd four Days after the Marriage of his 


Jon. 3 Son, anuary 3. about nine in * 1 
1672. And 


Gxxtral Moxk. 


413 


And as he livd in Silence, ſo he dy'd with- 
out Noiſe; one eaſy and ſingle Groan did the. 
Work of Death upon the ſtouteſt and moſt 
valiant Hero of the Age he lived in. In his 
Sickneſs he had been oſten viſited and ae 


forted by his Grace the then Arch - Biſnop of 


Canterbury; and, in thoſe his laſt Minutes, 
he was aſſiſted by the Prayers of the Biſhop 
of Salisbury, who attended him to his laſt 


Breath, eee his Eyes. 


XVI. Sven Was the Exit of this s high and 
After he had ſurvived ten 
thouſand Hazards of War and Battels, and 
ſurmounted as many Difficulties to redeem 
his Country; and, in his immortal March 
from Dalkeith to London, had led two King- 

doms in his own Triumph; after he had re- 
ſtored his Majeſty to his Crown, and had e- 
rected the Trophies of his Courage and Pru- 
dence in his Dominion at Land, and had 
humbled the Pride of the ſtubborn Enemy, 
the Dutch, in two memorable Battels at Sea; 
after he had ſeen the Enemies of this Crown 
under his Majeſty's Feet, and, for ten Years, 
faithfully aſſiſted in the Settlement of the 


illuſtrious Perſon. 


State; he exchanged this Mortal for an hap- 


* 


et "Os 


- is a 4 5 a Pr oY 
— . nd. Aa 4. 2 a>. EY 


n . 


414 Ne LIE 
py Immortality, 2 n Ay one e Vea 


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and twenty n nine . 


XVI. Tui E is of his Death was w quick 
Iy convey'd from his own Family to the 
Court adjoining, where it affected his Majeſty | 
and all Perſons with a very particular Sor- 
row; and the News thereof was enter: 
tain'd in the City, and throughout-the King · 
dom, as a publick Loſs and general Calami. 
ty, all Men commenting on the Fall of this 
their * ne with an oem Sor- 


XVII Aup as his Majeſty had always 
treated him with a very ſingular Eſteem all 
his Life-time, ſo he was pleas d to follow 


him with the Marks of his Royal Favour 


to the Grave, reſolving to celebrate the 
Duke's Funeral at his own Charge; and he 
aſſign'd him alſo a Tomb in Henry the VII“. 
Chapel, that the great Inſtaurator, and 
Guardian of Monarchy, might reſt himſelf 


near the crown'd Heads, and mix his loy- 
al Duſt. with the Aſhes of former Kings. 


XIX. JANUARY | 


NN. Fiitnkz * his Body was opened 
| pF embalmed, in order ro the Solemniry of 
his Funeral. But, e the Search, there 
was found only a large Quantity of diſco- 
loured Matter in the Cavity of the Belly, and 
no conſiderable Alteration or Injury upon the 
Parts within; fave only in the Heart it ſelf; 
both the Ventricles whereof were fill'd with 
a bloody Subſtance, which had alſo inſinuat- 
ed ir ſelf into the Mouths of the adjoining 
Veſſels, which had fo far precluded the even 


Motion and Circle of Blood through his 


Lungs, as gave him a perpetual Difficulty of 


breathing. His long and habitual Dropſy 


had alſo fo fax diſabled the Vigour and Mo- 


tion of his Blood, that it was not able to 


entertain and aſſimilare the chylous Li- 
quor offer'd from his Diet; which did firſt 
ſtick among the Fibres and Columns in 
both Ventricles of the Heart; and, by the 
continued and gradual Succeſſion of the like 


tenacious Matter, came at laſt to that Bulk 


as to fill up both the Cavities, and inevi- 


Blood. 
x AFTER 


» — — — . _— 


tably to ſtrand the further Current of his 


« 2 __ — ——A—5 ——— — —— — —_ —— A—[A—U3 B .w-V-T—— * 


—— * - ov — » _ no 
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N 1 Bae _ CO ee eee eee * 
ö a 9 EE W 
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WWW urn tie „ an, 2 1 _— _ „ 4 BY 


[EY who daily poſſeſs the Be- 
 nefit of this great Man's Prudence 
"and Loyalty, and never had the 
Happineſs of ſeeing him, will ex- 
| petit here ſome Character of his Perſon; which 
was indeed rather comely than elegant. His 
| Ee Stature 


* 


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Bload, which mofi other Men fing-fro: 
Want of it. Upon the lame. Account he , 
was capable of enduring 
Ka when — . upon hint, either by 
Religion, Neceſſity, or Buſineſs, without an) 


710 L E 1 
Stature was of the middle Size, A 3 


85 45 ad , e In his 22 


A to 4 Pride. His Ahed 
t tech 6 x. Fla knew 


tal, 4 de the Tos of an oe from 


the Lines of his Face! His Eye- ſight ſerved 
him to the laſt upon nearer Objects, though 
at remote Diſtances it was ſamewhat deſe- 


Aive. Which Imperfection was, in ſome 
Meaſure; recompenſed to him, with a very 


extraordinary Quickneſs of hearing; wherein 


he did ſo very far excel, chat, it was dange- 


tous to kiffer a Secret in 1 ſame Room 
with him 


His 8 alſo was framed to a fin- 
of Temperament, which in- 


gulaft Steddineſs 
50 bim to Jive with a very little Sleep, 
and without any of thoſe Emotions in his 


long ahd fi 


oe * e to ** a or any 0- 


ther 


— f& —_ — GOP» 3 N 5 . 


„der Inconvenience. In his Palate he Was. 
. fot cnrious, df at all ſł dious how to gratiff 
it. When he was young, he had the Small- 


Time, on Horſe-back, and marched. every 
at, without any of 
thoſe fatal Effects, which naturally Hollow 


it 
i pox; yet entertain d them, moſt Patt of the 
£ 


Day with his Regime 


n 
d from the leaſt n. of the cold Air. 
b 


- «Bay * we. come. to deſerribe the Vie 
tues and Endowments of his Mind, we en- 


e 
er upon a more copious and extenſive Sub- 
. jet. His Conra we 


yond any byperbolical Scrains of his q Friends, 


aud were never yet queſtion'd by his grear- 
eſt Enemies. They were not, like the un- 
certain and occaſional | Impetuoſity of the 


late Uſurper Cromuel, taken up by Fits; 


e hy and well adviſed Gecarnchs of 


„ Spirit, ſeparate from Raſhneſs, and conduct- 


d by an extraordinary Prudence and Fore- 
ſight. 80. chat in W many Engagements 


nals. And, in that ſingle Surprizal upon him 
bs the Daun F leet, he fought them ſo ſtout-. 


bst Keb is 


ed, he was always at- 
rended with 4 pci: uninterrupted Succeſs, 
which has rarely been conſtant to old Gene - 


„ ly 


by wich a very unequal - Force; and after- 


wards ſecured his Retreat with {ſo much Re- 
folu ion and Bravery, that his Enemies were 


acknowledge, there was ſomething 
neſs of Mind and ee that 


was more than Te en 


3 x > 9 *. . 


os 1 
N 


kr we dee 42 eiche ths Aſvendant of his 
Courage, or Fortune, it will not be caſy to 
find a Parallel i in his own Age, and as hardly 


in all Antiquity. He had reſtored his — 


with Camillus; but the Sequel of his Life 
was more glorious. He had all the Diſpatch 


of Cæſar, but none of his Ambition; the Po- 


pularity of Pompey, without any of bis Er- 

rors, or Misfortunes; the Eſtimation of LV. 
cullus, ſeparate from his Luxury; ; the In- 
duſtry of the braye Agricola, but in the Ser- 


. of a better Maſter. He had cqualled 


Scipio," in reducing the greater Enemies of the | 
Common-wealth, and more faithleſs than the 
Carthaginians, but exceeded him in the Love 
of his Country, and the Glory of his End. His 


Command, and the Times he lived in, had 
the neareſt Reſemblance to thoſe-of Sertorius 


in Hain; nor were there wanting Confede- 
rates about him of err inſidious Tem- 
3 | per: 


e VSF_ CW: CW + ge &© 


+ GrNTAAL Mork. 422 


per; but he look d ſo narrowly aſter them, 
that none of them could find thoſe Advan- 
tages againſt him, which were taken a 
that enden Ann . 


Ir his Virtues bad enn a Military; he 


* his Armour might, in peaceful Times, | 
have ruſted together. But as he had the Suf- 
ficiency of a great General in War, ſo he had 


equal Prudence and Induſtry in Civil Buſi- 
2 : And, when there was no more Occa- 


| fion for his Sword, he became a+ moſt uſe- 
| ful and neceſſary. Miniſter of State; where- 
in, if ſome few, have exceeded him in Dif. 


patch, yet none in Sureneſs and P idelity. 


By his Prudence he baffled all his Enemies, 


and unravelled all the Labyrinths of their 


crooked Subtilty. By the ſame Virtue he 


preſerved to himſelf the continued Affection 


and Kindneſs of his Majeſty, which ſhined 


upon him to the Evening of his Life, with- 
out the Interruption of the leaſt Cloud. By 


the like Quality he kept up his Eſtimation 
with his Equals, and. the Miniſters of State, 


againſt whom he had never given into any 


intriguing Schemes. And, as a Reward of 


his Prudence and Iotegrity, he had thoſe Ad- 
EF: | vantages 


— — — 7Uↄ— þ . Sed Wak PI 
— . — * - -— I TT . * 
— — — : — + — — * 
* s 


— 
pa — 


n TT Wy 


: Greatneſs of kis N Seryices with Sy ſpicion, Or 


| | 


SETS 
RE 


* 7 . 


vantages which have ſeldom been known t to 


center in the ſame Perſon; of being equally 
the Favourite of the King, ä the” Court, 9d 


the Prople: 3 oi 


#43 


N. oR was ir the e or er, that 


le of "looking: ſpon the 


eproach ro his own Great. 


neſs and Glory, to haye been reſtored by one 


a0 ao the fur- 


of his own Subjects. He 


ther good Fortune to perform his Seryice to 


the King in the Flower of his Age, and the 


Fulneſs of his Joys, before the narrow and 


* * „ 


which is more incident 


to an advanced Age, could be fappoſed to 


diſcover its ny Lg tos nate! Bt 


9 yy | 


His Silence oy adviſed Taciturnity was 


Part of his Prudence, which grew in a great 
Meaſure upon his Natnre, and became habi- 
tual to him, by a long Converſation among 
' thoſe whom he could neither love, nor 


thought | it ae to . Such was his 


Caution 


j 


GENERAL 
Caution and Warineſs, that he e com- 
monly 


thoſe Virtues in Perfection, which the Lord 
Baron 3 in a Peron i in a publick Of 
ennels in Fame Opinion 
in an habitual Conceal- 
uſe the Generality 
of Men ghred. in diſcourſing of 
thoſe Subjects wherein het: excel, or have 
been eminently ſucceſsful; ſome have con- 
trived to oblige. him, by making the Affairs 
of thoſe. Times, and lis extraordinary Servi- 
e ori g ;che King, he Subject of Con- 
in all which he 
would dees reply with lo great Humility, 
and / - 


himſelf, that there is not a Perſon now liv- 
ing, who can charge him with Vanity or O- 
ſtentation: And, perhaps, there is not an In- 
| _ in Hiſtory of any Man, who ever per- 

rm'd fuch great Ae, and diſcover d ſo 


ü lil Inclination to mention them, or to hear 


them 1 — by others. 


TI oven his Grave very well knew how 


to mow thoſe Regards, which were due to 
E c 4 | | his 


Moxx. 423 


contrive to be the laſt Man in the 
Company to declare his Opinion. He had 


f diſclaiming all Merit in 


—— — — 


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Length of his Shadow; by Appea 
the Noiſe about him; by Formalities, and a 


- 4 Ws , 27 5 ae 
pr dt. roi For a era Sc ev een eee 


2 Malicious whom he had 


5 and Intereſt are hardly ſeparable from Wealth. 


1424 5 ERP; 1 F E oy 


his Perſon. : Quality, yet ſutely no Man 
entertained hits own Greatneſs with leſs Ce- 


remony, being a profeſſed Enemy to the 


little pompous Vantticd,: by- Which! Perſons 


of the firſt Diſtinction ſo magnikice 


with one another. And they who could on- 
ly take the Height of a great Man, by the 


2 ces, and 


numerous Croud of Attendants; thought they 

wanted ſomething of Grandeur! in his Chari 
cter and Behaviour; who had indeed the Spi- 
rit of a great Heroe, with the Moderation of 
a Philoſopher; the Plainneſs of a good Man, 


1 with: the en al: a Damit. a 


Tut E Euptoun: ads. * +51 "ES r, 


defeated, have 
expoſed. his regular and decent Frugality to 


| the Diſadvantage of his Generoſity, | which, 


if rightly conſidered, was one of the greateſt 
Ornaments of his Life ; and did not proceed 
from the Littleneſs of his Mind, but from the 
Greatneſs of his Wiſdom. For his Grace had 
taken the true Meaſures of human Things; 
and eſteemed it as a ſure Maxim, that Power 


He 


| He very well knew how much Princes def- 
cend from the Footſtool of their Throne, and 


veil their Sovereignty to their Subjects, by 
too frequent, and, ſometimes, mean Appli- 


cations to their People in their Wants: How 
unable che Nobility are to ſupport their own 
Eſteem and Order, or to aſſiſt the Crown, 


whilſt they make themſelves contemptible 
and weak, by the Number and Weight of 


n the continual Datay: of ther 


their De 


come to 7.098 moſt baron lower and 
trading Part of the People, at one Time or 
other, it will: certainly be in their Power, 
and probably in their Deſires, to invade the 
Government. Theſe, and the like Conſide- 
rations, had moved the Duke of Albemarle 
to become as great an Example to the Nobi- 


lity of honourable good Husbandry, as be 
bad been before of Loyalty and Allegi- 


ANCE, 


Bzs1DEs his immortal Fame, he has ano- 
cher Inſtance of poſthumous Felicity, leav- 
ing behind him a 3 the preſent Duke of 


6 Alemarle, the Inheritor of his Nobility and 
. Glories; 


\ 
| 


GIII Moxx. 425 


r —¼ů . . . WEESPCA winyr arh, PIES 
od, 8 pled ads 4 7 1 R * an r 5 "A 


- — 
9 CVE ry TIE,” — — 
7 0 „ 
5 a F.. a 3 "= 
Pg : ? * 


| ” Glories; ; 430 grow 
X — ſemblance of ao, bar in the — 
df his Face, but in the; Bin e of his Mind, 
1 the Worthineſs of his Nature, and Height of 
his Courage and Gallantry. Beſides his own 
great Example, ther a ot given him, in his 
Life-rtime, the early Impreſſions of Virtue and 
1 Loyalty; and left him, at his Death, great 
| in the Favour of his Prince, great in the E. 
1 ſteem of the Nobility, great in the univerſal 
Affection of the eee and great in the 
Cucle of munen Fortune. 10 


A ˙ A 0 


Rt Sib wi were ate Feljcities: of the late Duke 

13 of \f Albemarle, as cannot poſſibly happen to 

| any, but to thoſe. who are ſingularly tuſtain- 
ed by the Divine Fayour, and have purſued 
glorious Ends; which will make Men of 

| reaoebellious and phanatical Principles afraid 

| bow they mix their Reproaches and Curſes 

| | among ſo many Bleſſings of God. 


— > Pe a 9 1 
en N * N l 
—— * ere 


| | | 4 Tuvs have we brought this Great, this 
vs Fortunate, this Triumphant 42 to his 
Ei | Grave , 1 
li | BR TA N AND 
{ NIC VM 


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